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Surface Treatments, Coatings, and Cleaning

This document discusses various surface treatment and coating processes including roller burnishing, thermal spray operations, physical vapor deposition, sputtering, ion plating, chemical vapor deposition, laser surface engineering, electroplating, electroforming, hot-dipped galvanizing of steel, ceramic coatings, and paint application methods. Diagrams illustrate examples of each process and how they work to modify surfaces.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
123 views13 pages

Surface Treatments, Coatings, and Cleaning

This document discusses various surface treatment and coating processes including roller burnishing, thermal spray operations, physical vapor deposition, sputtering, ion plating, chemical vapor deposition, laser surface engineering, electroplating, electroforming, hot-dipped galvanizing of steel, ceramic coatings, and paint application methods. Diagrams illustrate examples of each process and how they work to modify surfaces.

Uploaded by

simalaravi
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Chapter 34

Surface Treatments, Coatings, and


Cleaning

Manufacturing, Engineering & Technology, Fifth Edition, by Serope

Roller Burnishing

Figure 34.1 Burnishing tools and roller burnishing of (a) the fillet of a
stepped shaft to induce compressive-surface residual stresses for
improved fatigue life; (b) a conical surface; and (c) a flat surface.

Manufacturing, Engineering & Technology, Fifth Edition, by Serope

Thermal-Spray
Operations
Figure 34.2 Schematic illustrations of
thermal-spray operations: (a) thermal wire
spray; (b) thermal metal-powder spray, and
(c) plasma spray.

Manufacturing, Engineering & Technology, Fifth Edition, by Serope

Physical-Vapor Deposition and Sputtering

Figure 34.3 (a) Schematic illustration of the


physical-vapor-deposition process. Note
that there are three evaporators, and the
parts to be coated are placed on a tray
inside the chamber.

Figure 34.4 Schematic illustration of


the sputtering process.

Manufacturing, Engineering & Technology, Fifth Edition, by Serope

Ion-Plating Apparatus

Figure 34.5 Schematic illustration of an ion-plating apparatus.

Manufacturing, Engineering & Technology, Fifth Edition, by Serope

Chemical-Vapor-Deposition Process

Figure 34.6 Schematic illustration of the chemical-vapor-deposition process.


Note that parts and tools to be coated are placed on trays inside the chamber.

Manufacturing, Engineering & Technology, Fifth Edition, by Serope

Laser Surface-Engineering Processes

Figure 34.7 An outline of laser surface-engineering processes.


Source: After N. B. Dahotre.

Manufacturing, Engineering & Technology, Fifth Edition, by Serope

Electroplating

(b)

Figure 34.8 (a) Schematic illustration of the electroplating process. (b)


Examples of electroplated parts. Source: Courtesy fof BFG Engineering.

Manufacturing, Engineering & Technology, Fifth Edition, by Serope

Design for Uniform Coatings in Electroplating

Figure 34.9 (a) Schematic illustration of nonuniform coatings (exaggerated) in


electroplated parts. (b) Design guidelines for electroplating. Note that sharp
external and internal corners should be avoided for uniform plating thickness.

Manufacturing, Engineering & Technology, Fifth Edition, by Serope

Electroforming

(b)

Figure 34.10 (a) Typical sequence in electroforming. (1) A mandrel is selected with the
correct nominal size. (2) The desired geometry is machined into the mandrel (in this case a
bellows). (3) The desired metal is electroplated onto the mandrel. (4) The plated material
is trimmed if necessary. (5) The mandrel is desolved through chemical machining. (b) A
collection of electroformed parts. Source: Courtesy of Servometer, LLC.

Manufacturing, Engineering & Technology, Fifth Edition, by Serope

Hot-Dipped Galvanized Steel

Figure 34.11 Flow line for the


continuous hot-dipped
galvanizing of sheet steel. The
welder (upper left) is used to
weld the ends of coils to maintain
continuous material flow.
Source: Courtesy of the
American Iron and Steel Institute.

Manufacturing, Engineering & Technology, Fifth Edition, by Serope

Ceramic Coatings for High-Temperature Applications

Manufacturing, Engineering & Technology, Fifth Edition, by Serope

Paint Application Methods

Figure 34.12 Methods of paint application: (a) dip coating, (b) flow coating, and
(c) electrostatic spraying (used particularly for automotive bodies).

Manufacturing, Engineering & Technology, Fifth Edition, by Serope

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