Thermal spraying

Description of the technology

Spraying is an additive manufacturing technique in which a layer of material is applied to metallic objects without partially melting the substrate material, and the resulting coating is bonded to the substrate mechanically or adhesively, and in some cases diffusely. The surface temperature of the sprayed objects can even rise to a value close to the melting point, but the surface should never be partially molten.

Depending on the heat source in the process, spraying can be divided into:

  1. flame spraying – a process by which layers (mainly metals, ceramics, cermets) in a liquid or partially molten state are applied to metallic or non-metallic substrates by the heat of a gas flame in order to obtain a coating that adheres strongly to the substrate;
  2. arc spraying – involves melting two solid or flux-cored wires with the heat of an electric arc at a temperature of about 4,200-5,000 ◦C, glowing between their ends, the wires being fed at a constant and uniform speed. At the same time, a powerful jet of compressed air atomises the molten wire metal into very fine particles and hurls them at high speed onto the surface of the object to be sprayed.

Spraying processes can also be carried out using plasma arc and explosive machining.

Alternative technologies

  • thermochemical treatment

Visualisation of action

    Workpiece material types

    • steel
    • non-ferrous metals
    • cermets

    Examples of products

    • shafts
    • bushings
    • cylinders
    • pistons
    • crankshafts
    • hulls
    • load-bearing components
    • turbine blades in power plants (wind/thermal/water)
    • components of surgical instruments
    • components of electronics cooling systems
    • pipes
    • tanks
    • other machine components

    Implementation of the technology

    Required resources

    • spraying station or stations for plasma arc machining
    • tooling
    • shielding gases

    Required competences

    • training in the application of coatings by welding/laser methods

    Environmental aspects

    Water consumption

    Energy consumption

    Waste generated

    Expert evaluation

    Competitiveness

    Usability

    Environmental impact

    Development centers

    • AGH University of Krakow
    • Opole University of Technology
    • Warsaw University of Technology
    • Cracow University of Technology
    • Łukasiewicz – Warsaw Institute of Technology

    Legal conditions

    Companies using the technology