The method of electric arc metallization has both undeniable advantages and some disadvantages. For example, there is a burnout of alloying elements and a high content of oxides in the applied coating. Aerosol fluxing during metallization can solve this problem and neutralize the negative oxidative effect of interaction of the applied metal with air oxygen. This article discusses an effective method to improve physical and mechanical properties of an electrometallization coating using aerosol fluxing. The essence of this method is introduction of an aerosol together with compressed air into a torch of molten metal. This aerosol consists of an aqueous solution of the chemical inorganic materials. Such the aqueous solution is poured into a hydrodispergator, which is connected to the air channel of the metallizer. Aerosol fluxing makes it possible to deoxidize and ligate metal during electric arc metallization. As a result, the physical and mechanical properties of the metal increase. The paper considers the results of topographic studies of electrometallization coatings. Formed coatings have a structure with grain sizes from 200 to 2500 nm and also have pronounced and subtle grain boundaries. Aerosol fluxing with electric arc metallization forms a coating with finer-grained structure, which increases their strength. It is established that formed coatings have a finer-grained structure and increased strength when using aerosol fluxing during electric arc metallization. Metallographic studies showed that the thickness of the electrometallization coating varies from 2490 µm to 2586 µm. The use of aerosol fluxing during electric arc metallization does not significantly affect the coating thickness. The microhardness of electrometallization coatings was studied. This study showed that the use of aerosol flux consisting of Na2CO3 , Na3AlF6 , Na2B4O7 during metallization increases microhardness of electrometallization coatings by 1.6 – 1.9 times.
The paper presents the results of studies of the properties of hardened surface layers formed by micro-arc oxidation on the workpiece surfaces of aluminum alloy Al-12Si-Mg-Cu-Ni. The authors attempted to determine the influence of micro-arc oxidation modes on the properties of the modified layers. Investigation of the adhesion strength of the surface layers formed at different concentrations of electrolyte components and analysis of the change in coatings adhesion characteristics after thermal cycling were presented.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.