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Metal Coatings

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Many new materials have been developed, but steel remains the principal construction material for automobiles, appliances, and industrial machinery. Because of steel's vulnerability to attack by aggressive chemical environments or even from simple atmospheric oxidation, coatings are necessary to provide various degrees of protection. They range from hot-dipped and electroplated metals to tough polymers and flame-sprayed ceramics. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Metal Coatings


1
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2
Metal Coatings
  • Many new materials have been developed, but steel
    remains the principal construction material for
    automobiles, appliances, and industrial
    machinery. Because of steel's vulnerability to
    attack by aggressive chemical environments or
    even from simple atmospheric oxidation, coatings
    are necessary to provide various degrees of
    protection. They range from hot-dipped and
    electroplated metals to tough polymers and
    flame-sprayed ceramics.
  • In general, corrosive environments contain more
    than one active material, and the coating must
    resist penetration by a combination of oxidizers,
    solvents, or both. Thus, the best barrier is one
    that resists "broadband" corrosion.

3
  • Physical integrity of the coating is as important
    as its chemical barrier properties in many
    applications. For instance, coatings on impellers
    that mix abrasive slurries can be abraded
    quickly coatings on pipe joints will cold-flow
    away from a loaded area if the creep rate is not
    low and coatings on flanges and support brackets
    can be chipped or penetrated during assembly if
    impact strength is inadequate. Selecting the best
    coating for an application requires evaluating
    all effects of the specific environment,
    including thermal and mechanical conditions.

4
  • Zinc One of the most common and inexpensive
    protection methods for steel is provided by zinc.
    Zinc-coated, or galvanized, steel is produced by
    various hot-dipping techniques, but more steel
    companies today are moving into
    electrogalvanizing so they can provide both.
  • Oxidation protection of steel by zinc operates in
    two ways -- first as a barrier coating, then as a
    sacrificial coating. If the zinc coating is
    scratched or penetrated, it continues to provide
    protection by galvanic action until the zinc
    layer is depleted. This sacrificial action also
    prevents corrosion around punched holes and at
    cut edges.

5
  • The grades of zinc-coated steel commercialized in
    recent years have been designed to overcome the
    drawbacks of traditional galvanized steel, which
    has been difficult to weld and to paint to a
    smooth finish. The newer materials are intended
    specifically for stamped automotive components,
    which are usually joined by spot welding and
    which require a smooth, Class A painted finish.
  • Among today's improved galvanized steels is
    Inland Steel's Paint-Tite B family of three
    products. These galvannealed (heat-treated)
    steels have a hot-dipped zinc coating on one side
    and a light, gas-jet-wiped coating on the smooth
    side. They are thermally treated to provide a
    uniform, spangle-free, paintable, weldable,
    zinc-iron alloy coating. Because the zinc-iron
    crystals on the coated side are very fine, the
    sheet can be formed or rolled with no
    "print-through" in the top surface.

6
  • Another improved zinc-coated steel is Armco's
    Ultrasmooth, which has a hot-dipped zinc coating
    on both sides and surfaces comparable to a Class
    1 cold-rolled steel finish. Jets of nitrogen,
    which surround the steel as it emerges from the
    molten zinc, control the coating thickness. The
    resulting surfaces are free from ripples and
    oxide patterns commonly found on conventional
    hot-dipped galvanized steels.
  • Armco's newest zinc-coated product,
    Electrasmooth, has an electrogalvanized coating
    on one or both sides. Made by the vertical-cell
    process, it has a smooth, uniform surface
    suitable for painted automotive panels, appliance
    wrappers, and architectural products.
    Electrasmooth coatings are available on the full
    range of commercial and drawing-quality grades.

7
  • Another new process for zinc coating of steels is
    Galfan, developed by the International Lead Zinc
    Research Organization (ILZRO). In addition to
    zinc, the coating contains mischmetal (a mixture
    of cerium, lanthium, and other rare-earth metals)
    and 5 aluminum. Galfan is claimed to provide
    improved formability and paintability, and to
    have two to three times the corrosion resistance
    of conventional, hot-dipped galvanized steel in
    salt-spray, sulfur-dioxide, and humidity tests.
  • Licenses to produce the material in the U.S. have
    been granted to Gregory Galvanizing Metal
    Processing Inc., Canton, Ohio, and Weirton Steel
    Corp., Weirton, W.Va. Galfan has been used in
    Europe and Japan in applications such as building
    panels, automobile and appliance parts, and
    marine wire rope. U.S. applications include
    panels for washing machines, fence posts and
    related components, and garage-door hardware.
    Automotive applications include tubing for
    transmission cooling lines, various under-hood
    brackets and housings and, for the 1988 Ford
    T-Bird, a fuel-tank shield.

8
  • Another corrosion-resistant coated-steel product
    involving zinc is Zincrometal (Metal Coatings
    International), which is processed with a
    proprietary, two-coat system. The base coat is a
    chromium-base inorganic material called Dacromet.
    After the coating is baked, the coil is coated
    with a second material -- Zincromet, an
    epoxy-based, zinc-rich topcoat -- followed by
    another baking cycle.
  • Like the other zinc-coated materials, Zincrometal
    is used principally for truck and automobile
    exterior panels. Minimum dry-film thickness for
    such applications is 0.5 mil. With proper
    lubricants and drawing compounds, the formability
    of the material is comparable to that of
    cold-rolled steel. Welding characteristics are
    claimed to be similar to those of the uncoated
    steel.

9
  • Unlike hot-dip galvanized or electrogalvanized
    materials, Zincrometal provides barrier, rather
    than sacrificial, protection. Thus, it is
    recommended for use where corrosion protection is
    the primary need, where components are not
    subjected to abrasion or mechanical abuse.
    Zincrometal, which is manufactured on a toll
    basis by coil-coating companies, is essentially a
    one-sided product, however, and is being replaced
    in some automotive applications by two-side
    coated steels.
  • Aluminum Two types of aluminum-coated steel are
    produced, each for a different kind of corrosion
    protection. Type 1 has a hot-dipped
    aluminum-silicon coating to provide resistance to
    both heat and corrosion. Type 2 has a hot-dipped
    coating of commercially pure aluminum, which
    provides excellent durability and protection from
    atmospheric corrosion. Both grades, developed by
    Armco, the producer of these aluminized steels,
    are usually used unpainted.

10
  • Type 1 aluminum-coated steel resists heat scaling
    to 1,250F and has excellent heat reflectivity to
    900F. Nominal aluminum-alloy coating is about 1
    mil on each side. The sheet is supplied with a
    soft, satiny finish. Typical applications include
    reflectors and housings for industrial heater
    panels, interior panels and heat exchangers for
    residential furnaces, microwave ovens, automobile
    and truck muffler systems, heat shields for
    catalytic converters, and pollution-control
    equipment.
  • Type 2 aluminized steel, with an aluminum coating
    of about 1.5 mil on each side, resists
    atmospheric corrosion and is claimed to outlast
    zinc-coated sheet in industrial environments by
    as much as five to one. Typical applications are
    industrial and commercial roofing and siding,
    drying ovens, silo roofs, and housings for
    outdoor lighting fixtures and air conditioners.

11
  • For higher temperature applications, Type 1
    coatings are supplied on two new products.
    Aluma-Ti is a vacuum-degassed, interstitial-free
    steel containing columbium and titanium that can
    be used in cyclic service to 1,400F. The second
    product, Aluma-Fuse, operates to a maximum metal
    temperature of 1,600F. Its high-temperature
    properties come from a combination of the
    diffused coating and a low-alloy steel base metal
    containing chromium, aluminum, silicon,
    columbium, and titanium, plus a heat treatment.
  • Armco has also developed a process for aluminum
    coating of Type 409 stainless steel. This
    product, first tested in some 1987 automobiles,
    is expected to extend exhaust-system life to five
    years or more because of its superior resistance
    to corrosion by hot exhaust condensates and road
    salts. Another benefit of the aluminum coating is
    cosmetic. It prevents red rust staining
    indefinitely.

12
  • Electroplating Use of protective electroplated
    metals has changed in recent years, mainly
    because of rulings by the Environmental
    Protection Agency. Cyanide plating solutions and
    cadmium and lead-bearing finishes are severely
    restricted or banned entirely. Chromium and
    nickel platings are much in use, however, applied
    both by conventional electroplating techniques
    and by new, more efficient methods such as Fast
    Rate Electrodeposition (FRED). This latter method
    has also been used successfully by Battelle
    Columbus Labs to deposit stainless steel on
    ferrous substrates.
  • Functional chromium, or "hard chrome," plating is
    used for antigalling and low-friction
    characteristics as well as for corrosion
    protection. These platings are usually applied
    without copper or nickel underplates in
    thicknesses from about 0.3 to 2 mil. Hard-chrome
    plating is recommended for use in saline
    environments to protect ferrous components
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