A Computational Examination of the Sources of Statistical Variance in Particle Parameters During Thermal Plasma Spraying

Author(s):  
R.L. Williamson ◽  
J.R. Fincke ◽  
C.H. Chang

Abstract Computational modeling is used to systematically examine many of the sources of statistical variance in particle parameters during thermal plasma spraying. Using the computer program LAVA, a steady-state plasma jet typical of a commercial torch at normal operating conditions, is first developed. Then, assuming a single particle composition (ZrO2) and injection location, real world complexity (e.g., turbulent dispersion, particle size and density, injection velocity and direction, etc.) is introduced "one phenomenon at a time" to distinguish and characterize its effect and enable comparisons of separate effects. A final calculation then considers all phenomena simultaneously, to enable further comparisons. Investigating each phenomenon separately provides valuable insight into particle behavior. For the typical plasma jet and injection conditions considered, particle dispersion in the injection direction is most significantly affected by (in order of decreasing importance): particle size distribution, injection velocity distribution, turbulence, and injection direction distribution or particle density distribution. Only the distribution of injection directions and turbulence affect dispersion normal to the injection direction, and are of similar magnitude in this study. With regards to particle velocity and temperature, particle size is clearly the dominant effect.

2000 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Ahmed ◽  
T. L. Bergman

Abstract A 3D simulation of the thermal plasma spraying process is reported. In particular, the effect of the radial injection of a carrier gas is taken into account for a dilute spray. The thermal history of powder particles of different sizes is predicted. It is shown that introduction of a carrier gas can lead to a significant modification of the plasma jet, and can have an effect on the thermal histories of the injected particles. The study is motivated by the processing of non-traditional materials, specifically nanostructured ceramics.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Bobzin ◽  
H. Heinemann ◽  
A. O‘Brien

Abstract Instabilities and fluctuations of the plasma jet can have a significant influence on the particle in-flight temperatures and velocities, thus affecting the properties of plasma sprayed coatings. Presented in this paper is a novel method for capturing the effects particles are exposed to in the plasma spraying process. High-speed camera images of a plasma jet generated by a cascaded three cathode plasma generator (TriplexPro-210) are recorded for varying operating conditions. The images are processed using the inverse Abel transform. This transformation accounts for the fact that the images represent a 2-D projection and generates correct intensity values of the plasma jet images. These images are then combined with particle tracks resulting from CFD simulations of the plasma jet to match the particles path with the recorded plasma jet. This new method allows a precise description of the plasma intensity experienced by individual particles with a high temporal resolution. The results show a high sensitivity of the method, it can even detect the influence of the plasma jet originating from the cascaded triple arc plasma generator, which is considered as rather stable, on the particles.


2005 ◽  
Vol 475-479 ◽  
pp. 2883-2886
Author(s):  
Heji Huang ◽  
Keisuke Eguchi ◽  
Makoto Kambara ◽  
Toyonobu Yoshida

With a newly established 300kW twin hybrid plasma spraying system, a peculiar layered composite zirconia coating was successfully deposited. The coating is consisting of splats and dendritic columns, which come from thermal plasma spraying and thermal plasma PVD, respectively. A 120µm-thick composite coating was deposited in 10 minutes at the corresponding growth rate of 100µm/min, if the rotation of the substrates is considered. The microstructure of such composite coatings has been characterized using a variety of microscopic techniques as part of a process optimization study.


2000 ◽  
Vol 123 (1) ◽  
pp. 188-196 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Ahmed ◽  
T. L. Bergman

A three-dimensional simulation of the thermal plasma spraying process is reported. In particular, the effect of the radial injection of a carrier gas is taken into account for a dilute spray. The thermal history of powder particles of different sizes is predicted. It is shown that introduction of a carrier gas can lead to a significant modification of the plasma jet, and can have an effect on the thermal histories of the injected particles. The study is motivated by the processing of non-traditional materials, specifically nanostructured ceramics.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document