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| United States Patent | 4544412 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4544412.html |
| Inventor(s) | Veltri; Richard D. (East Hartford, CT);
Galasso; Francis S. (Manchester, CT) |
| Abstract | Carbon-carbon composite materials are provided with significantly enhanced
oxidation resistance by the formation of a SiC coating. The coating is
produced from a pack containing a small but effective amount of boron. The
balance of the pack is preferably based on Al.sub.2 O.sub.3, SiO.sub.2,
and Si. The composite to be coated is embedded in the pack and heated to
an elevated temperature. The boron addition provides a conversion SiC
coating having enhanced resistance to oxidation. |
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Title Information  |
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| Publication Date |
October 1, 1985 |
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| Parent Case |
This is a division of application Ser. No. 391,613, filed on June 24, 1982,
now U.S. Pat. No. 4,476,164. |
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Title Information  |
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Description  |
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DESCRIPTION
1. Technical Field
This invention concerns SiC base conversion coatings for carbon-base
materials, and to methods for producing such coatings.
2. Background Art
Carbon-carbon composites are a class of unique materials whose properties,
especially at elevated temperatures, make them attractive for various
aerospace applications. The materials are composites although all of the
composite elements are comprised essentially of carbon, in its various
allotropic forms. Carbon-carbon materials are produced starting with
organic precursor fibers such as polyacrylonitrile, rayon or pitch. Such
fibers are usually produced in bundles (yarn), often by an extrusion
process. The precursor fibers are heated in an inert atmosphere to
pyrolyze or carbonize them and may then be heated to a higher temperature
(e.g. 4000.degree. F., 2204.degree. C.) to form graphite fibers. These
carbon or graphite materials may then be laid down, woven, or interleaved
to form what are referred to as 1D, 2D, 3D, etc. structures where D stands
for direction (i.e. in a 2D structure, fibers are laid in two, usually
orthogonal directions).
These woven structures can then be impregnated with a pitch or resin
material which is converted to carbon and then graphite. In this process,
hot pressing is also employed to obtain a dense structure. Repeated
impregnation steps can be employed to increase density.
An alternative processing scheme is to use chemical vapor deposition (CVD)
to deposit pyrolytic graphite matrix.
The finished product is 90+% carbon but by virtue of the fiber alignment
and other processing details such as densification, has exceptional
mechanical properties when compared with other carbon type materials. The
mechanical properties are constant, or even increase slightly, with
temperatures up to about 4000.degree. F. (2204.degree. C.). This
temperature capability makes carbon-carbon materials exceptionally
attractive for various aerospace applications including gas turbine
engines. The obvious drawback is the susceptibility of carbon-carbon
materials to oxidation. The present invention concerns a coating to
protect carbon-carbon materials from catastrophic oxidation at
temperatures up to at least 2500.degree. F. (1371.degree. C.).
It is known in the prior art to use SiC conversion coatings to protect
carbon-base materials, including carbon-carbon composites. Such coatings
are conversion coatings because the surface of the article to be coated is
converted to SiC by reacting it with silicon. Pack coating processes are
popular. A carbon article can be embedded and heated in a pack material
which will produce Si or Si compound vapors when heated. Specifically,
pack compositions based on Al.sub.2 O.sub.3, Si and SiO.sub.2 are known.
It is also known in the art to use additions of boron compounds and boron
throughout the matrix of carbon-base materials to reduce oxidation
susceptibility. This is revealed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 2,992,960; 3,374,102;
3,672,936; and 4,119,189 as well as in The Society for the Advancement of
Material and Process Engineering (SAMPE) Conference Proceedings, 1976,
Vol. 8, pp. 308-337 by D. C. Rogers et, al.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,936,574 describes a slurry coating process employing a
slurry containing 10-35% B for protecting carbon base materials.
A duplex pack coating process employing a first pack of 100% B and a second
pack containing Zr and Si is described in SAMPE Conference Proceedings,
1976, Vol. 8, pp. 308-337 by D. C. Rogers et al.
The basic concept of pack derived coatings to protect carbon-base materials
appears in U.S. Pat. No. 3,095,316 and in the SAMPE Conference
Proceedings, 1975, Vol. 7, pp. 319-336 by D. C. Rogers et al.
It is an object of this invention to describe a method for producing an
improved pack derived coating on carbon-base materials, specifically on
carbon-carbon materials.
DISCLOSURE OF INVENTION
A powdered pack material (which produces Si and/or Si compound vapors) used
to produce SiC conversion coatings on carbon-carbon materials produces SiC
coatings with enhanced performance when 0.1%-3.0% B is added to the pack.
A pack based on SiC, Si, and Al.sub.2 O.sub.3 and nominally containing 60%
SiC, 30% Si, 9% Al.sub.2 O.sub.3 and 1% boron can produce such an enhanced
coating on a carbon-carbon article embedded in the pack when the
combination is heated to a temperature of 1600.degree.-1800.degree. C. for
1-8 hours in an inert atmosphere.
The foregoing, and other features and advantages of the present invention,
will become more apparent from the following description.
BEST MODE FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION
Carbon-carbon composite materials are provided with an improved conversion
silicon carbide coating through the use of a pack coating technique in
which a small amount of boron is added to the coating pack. It has been
known in the prior art to protect carbon-based materials including
carbon-carbon composite materials by developing a silicon carbide
conversion coating on the surface of the article to be protected using
pack techniques. For example, a pack containing mixed powders of the
approximate composition (by weight): 10% Al.sub.2 O.sub.3, 60% SiC, and
30% Si may be used to produce a silicon carbide conversion coating to the
surface of a carbon-base material by surrounding the article to be coated
with the pack material and heating it at approximately 1700.degree. C. for
a time on the order of five hours. During this treatment, Si from the pack
material diffuses into the carbon-carbon material to form a silicon
carbide coating which extends inward from the article surface
approximately 1-10 mils, depending upon the characteristics of the
carbon-based material and exact coating process parameters. Such silicon
carbide conversion coatings find application in protecting the carbon
surface from oxidation at elevated temperatures. The silicon carbide
coating can be used alone to protect the surface from moderate oxidizing
conditions or can be used as a base or foundation layer upon which further
layers of protective coatings are applied in order to provide protection
to the carbon surface under extremes of temperatures for extended periods
of time.
We have found that the protective character of the pack derived silicon
carbide coating can be substantially and unexpectedly improved if a small
amount of boron is included in the pack material from which the coating is
generated. From about 0.1 to 3% boron may be included in the previously
described pack. Preferably the boron level is in the range of 0.2 to 1.5%.
Lesser boron levels do not provide the desired protective characteristics
while boron levels much in excess of about 1% lead to sintering of the
pack material to the article being coated rendering its subsequent removal
difficult. Nonetheless the broad ranges of boron additions may well be
useful in situations where the pack ingredients are altered in species or
amount. The beneficial results of boron additions will be illustrated in
the following example. Table 1 lists the constituents of two pack
compositions which were used to apply protective silicon carbide
conversion coatings to the surface of a carbon-carbon composite material.
TABLE 1
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With Without Mesh Broad
Boron %
Boron % Size* Range %
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Al.sub.2 O.sub.3
9 10 -325 Balance
SiC 60 60 -400 50-70
Si 30 30 -200 25-35
B 1 -- -325 .2-3
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*US Std Sieve
This pack material was mixed and placed in a graphite crucible. The article
to be coated was buried in the pack material and the crucible was covered
with a tightly fitting graphite cover. The covered crucible was placed in
a furnace with an argon atmosphere and heated to a temperature of
1680.degree. C. for about five hours. This produced a conversion coating
having a depth of about 4 mils. The coated articles were then overcoated
with a thin layer of chemically vapor deposited (CVD) Si.sub.3 N.sub.4
having a thickness of about 3 mils. These samples were then evaluated by
oxidation testing at 2000.degree. F. in a furnace with an air atmosphere.
The samples were periodically removed (about every 10 hours) and evaluated
for coating performance by monitoring weight change. The sample which had
been coated in the pack which did not contain boron lost about 10% of its
total weight in the first 20 hours of testing and testing was terminated.
The sample which had been conversion coated in the boron containing pack
displayed a weight gain of about 0.03% in 200 hours of testing. This
weight gain is within the experimental accuracy of the measurements
involved and it can therefore be said that the boron containing conversion
coating was completely effective in protecting the carbon-carbon composite
from oxidation at 2000.degree. F. for 200 hours of testing.
The role of the boron in providing the observed benefits is not well
understood. Two possibilities will be mentioned. The first is that the
boron has diffused into the carbon-carbon material and thereby given it
some intrinsic resistance to oxidation. The second possibility is that the
effect of the boron is merely to provide a more uniform and dense silicon
carbide coating by promoting sintering of the pack material and thus
providing close contact with the pack material with the carbon-carbon
composite. We believe that the boron does enter into the pack coating and
in some fashion increases the inherent oxidation resistance of the coating
itself, perhaps through formation of boron-carbon compounds.
As noted, the Al.sub.2 O.sub.3, SiC and Si pack ingredients and proportions
are known in the art. Boron has been shown to improve the properties of
SiC conversion coatings produced by this pack and Al.sub.2 O.sub.3 - SiC -
Si packs are preferred. It should be apparent that other pack
compositions, which produce free Si/SiC vapors under deposition
conditions, will also likely benefit from the addition of boron. In like
manner, only elemental B has been studies but suitable boron containing
compounds such as B.sub.4 C will also produce the desired result--the
essential feature is that the boron containing compound dissociates under
the coating conditions employed so that elemental boron is available, and
that the other compound constituents have no adverse effect on the pack
coating process.
It should be understood that the invention is not limited to the particular
embodiments shown and described herein, but that various changes and
modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of
this novel concept as defined by the following claims.
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Description  |
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