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Sand erosion performance of CVD boron carbide coated tungsten carbide

Sand erosion performance of CVD boron carbide coated tungsten carbide
Sand erosion performance of CVD boron carbide coated tungsten carbide
The erosion performance and the interaction between the micro-mechanisms of erosion and the microstructure of a chemical vapour deposited boron carbide coating are presented. Samples were tested using both water–sand slurry and air–sand jet impingements at 90° incidence. Tests used angular quartz sand with a mean diameter between 135 and 235 µm and jet impingement velocities between 16 and 268 m s-1. The chemical vapour deposition (CVD) boron carbide coatings were 15–20 µm thick and deposited on a range of substrates of sintered tungsten carbide with 6 to 15 wt.% metal binder. The results, relative to the erosion resistance of the uncoated substrates, show the coatings to have higher resistance (10 times) under lower energy impacts but similar resistance at higher energy impacts. The sintered boron carbide had a similar erosion resistance to that of sintered tungsten carbide except at high energy impacts where it outperforms tungsten carbide and CVD boron carbide by a factor of 2. The performance of these coatings against erodent mass and impact energy are discussed and related to the nano and micro brittle fracture mechanisms identified by detailed microscopy and predicted by Hertzian cone crack theory. Partial concentric spalling of the coating was also evident in regions where circular Hertzian surface cracks are present. These erosion mechanisms, primarily nano-chipping and crack propagation, are also related to the microstructure and composition identified by XRD analysis and Raman spectroscopy. These results, in conjunction with fracture toughness and micro-hardness measurements, suggest that the coating composition is not pure B13C2 but has less erosion resistant forms of boron carbide present such as B50C2
sand erosion, boron carbide, tungsten carbide
0043-1648
134-150
Wood, R.J.K.
8824ab38-4508-41d1-a5bb-2fe37931424a
Wheeler, D.W.
d276c145-56e0-48d0-ae37-a84dda92a947
Lejeau, D.C.
0266958e-1b5b-4e45-86f3-7a6ae0093ace
Mellor, B.G.
9ce358bb-17c7-4e06-9bb6-ca7a379bd79b
Wood, R.J.K.
8824ab38-4508-41d1-a5bb-2fe37931424a
Wheeler, D.W.
d276c145-56e0-48d0-ae37-a84dda92a947
Lejeau, D.C.
0266958e-1b5b-4e45-86f3-7a6ae0093ace
Mellor, B.G.
9ce358bb-17c7-4e06-9bb6-ca7a379bd79b

Wood, R.J.K., Wheeler, D.W., Lejeau, D.C. and Mellor, B.G. (1999) Sand erosion performance of CVD boron carbide coated tungsten carbide. Wear, 233-235, 134-150. (doi:10.1016/S0043-1648(99)00230-6).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The erosion performance and the interaction between the micro-mechanisms of erosion and the microstructure of a chemical vapour deposited boron carbide coating are presented. Samples were tested using both water–sand slurry and air–sand jet impingements at 90° incidence. Tests used angular quartz sand with a mean diameter between 135 and 235 µm and jet impingement velocities between 16 and 268 m s-1. The chemical vapour deposition (CVD) boron carbide coatings were 15–20 µm thick and deposited on a range of substrates of sintered tungsten carbide with 6 to 15 wt.% metal binder. The results, relative to the erosion resistance of the uncoated substrates, show the coatings to have higher resistance (10 times) under lower energy impacts but similar resistance at higher energy impacts. The sintered boron carbide had a similar erosion resistance to that of sintered tungsten carbide except at high energy impacts where it outperforms tungsten carbide and CVD boron carbide by a factor of 2. The performance of these coatings against erodent mass and impact energy are discussed and related to the nano and micro brittle fracture mechanisms identified by detailed microscopy and predicted by Hertzian cone crack theory. Partial concentric spalling of the coating was also evident in regions where circular Hertzian surface cracks are present. These erosion mechanisms, primarily nano-chipping and crack propagation, are also related to the microstructure and composition identified by XRD analysis and Raman spectroscopy. These results, in conjunction with fracture toughness and micro-hardness measurements, suggest that the coating composition is not pure B13C2 but has less erosion resistant forms of boron carbide present such as B50C2

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More information

Published date: 1999
Keywords: sand erosion, boron carbide, tungsten carbide

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 21306
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/21306
ISSN: 0043-1648
PURE UUID: 83dd702e-5600-401f-a178-660f4c8a1ab7

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Date deposited: 22 Nov 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 06:29

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Contributors

Author: R.J.K. Wood
Author: D.W. Wheeler
Author: D.C. Lejeau
Author: B.G. Mellor

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