Resources Contact Us Home
Browse by: INVENTOR PATENT HOLDER PATENT NUMBER DATE
 
 
Protective coating for articles
RE29852 Protective coating for articles

Patent Drawings:
Inventor: Kessler
Date Issued: November 28, 1978
Application: 05/765,160
Filed: February 3, 1977
Inventors: Kessler; Saul (Canoga Park, CA)
Assignee: Aidlin; Joseph W. (Los Angeles, CA)
Primary Examiner: Sneed; Helen M. S.
Assistant Examiner:
Attorney Or Agent: Jacobs; Marvin E.
U.S. Class: 148/274; 556/172; 556/176; 556/181; 556/27; 556/28; 556/51; 556/56; 556/7; 564/8
Field Of Search: 260/429.5; 260/448R; 260/66.5B; 260/577; 260/2M; 260/578; 260/59R
International Class:
U.S Patent Documents: 3275690; 3297771; 3992454
Foreign Patent Documents:
Other References: Chemical Abstracts, vol. 58, 13412 (1963)..
Chemical Abstracts, vol. 57, 12518i-12519 (1962)..
Chemical Abstracts, vol. 70, 3123y (1969)..
Chemical Abstracts, vol. 74, 87521v (1971)..

Abstract: A protective coating for articles, and particularly titanium, is disclosed. The coating material comprises a combination of a metal halide and a fluorohydrocarbon amine. The surface of the article is preferably preliminarily cleaned by physical and/or chemical techniques, and is treated with a chemical conversion coating agent to provide an inert, microporous surface. The treated surface is then impregnated with the coating material to provide a low friction, protective surface.
Claim: What is claimed is:

1. A composition comprising the wax-like reaction product having a decomposition temperature of at least 575.degree. F of:

a polychloro-substituted aliphatic compound containing 1-8 carbon atoms; .Iadd.and having a boiling point above 100.degree. C; .Iaddend.

a metal halide selected from a fluoride, chloride, bromide or iodide of aluminum, titanium or boron; and

a fluoroalkyl aryl compound of the formula: ##STR2## where n is an integer from 1 to 4, m is an integer from 0 to 2, and R is selected from hydrogen, lower alkyl, lower alkanol, aryl or aralkyl.

2. A composition according to claim 1 in which the metal is boron.

3. A composition according to claim 2 in which the boron halide is a fluoride.

4. A composition according to claim 3 in which the fluoroalkyl aryl compound is a fluoroalkyl aryl amine.

5. A composition according to claim 1 in which the polychloro-compound is a terminally chlorinated alkene containing .[.1.]. .Iadd.2 .Iaddend.to 8 .Iadd.carbon .Iaddend.atoms.

6. A composition according to claim 5 in which the alkene is tetrachloroethylene.

7. A composition according to claim 3 in which the metal halide is boron tri-fluoride etherate.

8. A composition according to claim 4 in which the fluoroalkyl-aryl amine is .alpha.,.alpha.,.alpha.-trifluoro-m-toluidine.

9. A composition according to claim 1 including 1 to 50 parts by volume of each of said metal halide and fluoroalkylaryl compound.
Description: BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Field of the Invention

The present invention relates to the protective coating of articles and, more particularly, to a protective lubricant for metal bodies made of titanium and titanium alloys.

2. Description of the Prior Art

It is necessary to protectively coat titanium articles to lubricate surfaces subject to bearing of friction forces. Furthermore, titanium surfaces in contact at room temperature must be prevented from cold welding. Improved coating materialsare needed since titanium is being considered increasingly for applications in the aircraft, aerospace, automotive and marine fields.

Titanium has been protectively coated by anodizing treatments, graphite containing coatings, molybdenum sulfide coatings in various vehicles and tallow. These treatments have not been satisfactory under various conditions of service and havebeen found to interfere with subsequent fabrication techniques. During fabrication, the coating must withstand temperatures of 500.degree. F or more during welding or bending operations. The coating must be coherent and adherent to the surface so thatit can withstand abrasion forces encountered during handling, fabrication and service.

The coatings prior to this invention have been found to vaporize and fume in high temperature environments and to lose their effectiveness in short periods of service by running off the surface in liquid form or abrading from the surface inobjectionable dust form. Furthermore, welding was impractical unless special joining procedures were practiced. Also, the surface appearance was unattractive due to staining and wetting. Moreover, a protective coating was difficult to apply withoutchanging the dimensional tolerances of metal articles.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

An improved coating material for protective coating of surfaces is provided by the present invention which is not subject to the disadvantages or limitations of the previous materials and provides dramatic improvement in performancecharacteristics. The coating material of the invention provides a surface with a very low coefficient of friction and can be subjected to high temperature without deterioration, or fuming, thus avoiding developing obnoxious and polluting vapors.

The protective coating of the invention remains in a solid or semi-solid state adherent and coherent during handling, fabrication or service at low or high temperature and, therefore, does not leak oily liquids to aqueous environments or generateparticulates or dust to contribute to atmospheric contamination.

The continuity of the protective film under varied conditions assures corrosion prevention and the film exhibits a pleasing initial appearance and improved resistance to staining or wetting. Weldability can be practiced by conventionaltechniques and abrasion resistance by unidirectional or oscillatory motion is enhanced as compared to previous materials.

These and many other attendant advantages of the invention will become apparent as the description proceeds.

The improved coating material according to the invention comprises a combination of a metal halide and a polyfluoroalkene amine. The material is applied to the surface usually after a preliminary cleaning treatment and a surface rougheningpreferably affected by etching or chemical conversion coating. After excess coating material is removed, the article is ready for further fabrication or service. The coating material can be applied directly to the surface from a liquid suspension orfrom the gas phase.

The invention will now become better understood by reference to the following detailed description when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.

Brief Description of the Drawings

FIG. 1 is a schematic view of processing steps for forming a protective coated article according to the invention; and

FIG. 2 is an enlarged cross-sectional view of the wall of a tubing article treated in accordance with the invention.

DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

The particular description which follows relates to the treatment of titanium articles, one of the most difficult metals to lubricate, but, obviously, the treatment is applicable to other metal surfaces such as aluminum, tin, copper, zinc orchromium, iron or alloys thereof. The coating can be applied to diverse substrates for lubrication or environmental protection such as wood, paper, plastic or ceramic articles in filament, sheet, rod or powder form.

Commercial titanium alloys generally contain at least 90% by weight of titanium and minor amounts of other alloying metals such as up to 4% or more of vanadium. Commercially pure titanium alloy A-70 has the following nominal composition:

______________________________________ Element WT, % ______________________________________ C 0.08 Fe 0.40 N 0.05 H 0.15 Ti Balance ______________________________________

The coating material is formed from a combination of ingredients which react to form a fluoro, chloro, bromo or iodo, waxy hydrocarbon-amine lubricating material capable of forming a coherent and adherent film on the surface of the article.

The first ingredient utilized in forming the material is a compound of fluorine, bromine, iodine or chlorine, and a metal such as boron, aluminum or titanium. A preferred material is boron trifluoride and especially in a stabilized form as acomplex with an ether such as diethyl ether.

The other necessary ingredient is a fluorinated hydrocarbon having a relatively high content of available and active fluorine atoms which is reactive with the metal halide. Preferred materials are fluoroalkyl-aryl compounds selected from thoseof the formula: ##STR1## where n is an integer from 0 to 4, m is an integer from 0-2 and R is selected from hydrogen, lower alkyl of 1-9 carbon atoms, lower alkanol of 1-8 carbon atoms and aryl such as phenyl or aralkyl such as benzyl. A suitablematerial is .alpha.,.alpha.,.alpha.,-trifluoro-m-toluidine. The presence of an amino group is believed to relieve stress in the deposited film in a manner analogous to the action exhibited by sulfonamides in electrodeposition or anodizing of aluminum.

The metal halide and fluorinated hydrocarbon can be reacted in bulk, in solution or suspension in a fluid in liquid or gas phase. In the gas phase reaction, the fluorinated hydrocarbon in a liquid carrier is first coated onto the surface to betreated. The metal halide as a vapor is then applied to the coated surface and reacts in situ with the fluorinated hydrocarbon to form an adherent, waxy, protective layer, preferably as a monomolecular epitaxial layer.

The waxy protective material may be preformed and applied to the surface. The reaction is preferably carried out in an organic liquid diluent or solvent, preferably having a boiling point above 100.degree. C. Higher molecular weight productsare formed in the liquid carrier and a suspension is formed which can readily be applied to the surface to be treated.

Suitable diluents are polychloro substituted unsaturated aliphatic compounds such as trichloroethylene, carbon tetrachloride, tetrachloroethylene, difluoro-dichloro-ethylene, fluorotrichloroethylene or other terminally halogenated alkenes of 1-8carbon atoms. For purposes of reactivity during forming the coating material and for inertness and temperature resistance of the material, the compound is preferably substituted with chlorine on the carbon atoms adjacent the unsaturation, such astetrachloroethylene.

The ratio of the ingredients can be varied within wide limits depending on the hardness and other desired characteristics of the film and the economics of maximizing yield. Since the diluent, such as tetrachloroethylene, is readily available atlow cost, it can predominate in the reaction mixture. Satisfactory yields are obtained by including minor amounts of from 1-20 parts and preferably about 2-5 parts by volume of the other ingredients. Though the order of addition is not critical, it ispreferable to first form a mixture of the diluent and fluorinated hydrocarbon before adding the metal halide.

A specific example follows:

EXAMPLE 1

A coating was prepared from the following ingredients:

______________________________________ Component Amount ______________________________________ Tetrachloroethylene Cl.sub.2 C.dbd.CCl.sub.2 900-960 ml Boron trifluoride etherate 50-20 ml (C.sub.2 H.sub.5).sub.2 O .multidot. BF.sub.3 .alpha.,.alpha.,.alpha.,-trifluoro-m-toluidine 50-20 ml (C.sub. H.sub.6 f.sub.3 n) ______________________________________

The toluidine and tetrachloroethylene were combined and a cloudy suspension was formed. When the metal halide etherate was added, globules of a fluffy, waxlike, white precipitate was observed in copious volume after storage at room temperature. A maximum volume of waxlike solid of over 1/2 the initial volume of the mixture was obtained after several days. The reaction could be accelerated by heating the mixture to a higher temperature. The waxlike material was heated to 575.degree. F and nodecomposition or melting of the material was observed. Since the formation of a waxy solid is observed, a chloro-fluoro-boro substituted hydrocarbon polymer is believed to be formed.

EXAMPLE 2

Trichloroethylene was substituted for the tetrachloroethylene of Example 1. A fluffy, waxlike, gelatinous, lightly colored reaction product was formed.

EXAMPLE 3

Carbon tetrachloride was substituted for the tetrachloroethylene of Example 1. A product similar to that of Example 2 was formed.

EXAMPLE 4

When the tetrachloroethylene was eliminated, a more vigorous and exothermic reaction occurred and a more solid reaction product was recovered.

EXAMPLE 5

An equivalent amount of BBr.sub.3 liquid was substituted for the BF.sub.3 etherate of Example 1. The yield was almost doubled, the reaction product was more soluble in organic solvent and the suspension in the liquid carrier was more uniform andstable.

EXAMPLE 6

An equal amount by weight of BI.sub.3 crystals were substituted for the BF.sub.3 etherate of Example 1. The reaction product was less soluble in organic solvent and separated out as individual hard particles in lower yield. The product was moresoluble in water.

EXAMPLE 7

A standard cold-rolled, carbon steel tube specimen was pretreated by cleaning as described in FIG. 1. The coating composition of Example 1 was applied to the treated surface by dipping and then rinsed in water. An adherent, lubricating,protective film was provided.

EXAMPLE 8

303/4 inch .times.1 inch cylindrical specimens of titanium articles pretreated with the composition of Example 1 were placed in an aqueous saline solution along with 15 untreated specimens. The saline was heated to 500.degree. F for 200 hoursand 750.degree. F for 50 hours. The treated specimens exhibited excellent corrosion resistance showing no discoloration and some minor shallow and diffused pitting on some specimens. There was some weight loss of the coating on the treated specimens. Unexpectedly, the untreated specimens showed some initial pitting but the exhibited weight gain due to the transference and reaction with coating composition emanating from the treated specimens. Thus, the coating composition of the invention may beutilized to treat surfaces in situ by dispersion in a liquid medium.

The material can be applied to the surface to be protected by dipping, brushing, spraying, tumbling, electrophoresis or by forming the material in situ by separate application of liquid ingredients or gaseous infusion of vaporous ingredients tothe substrate. When the ingredients were combined in the presence of the surface to be treated, such as the conversion coated surfaces described in Table I, an accelerated reaction was observed and the yield of waxlike precipitate was substantiallyincreased.

Referring now to FIG. 1, a generalized sequence of steps for protectively coating a substrate is illustrated. The metal article 10, such as a commercially pure titanium cylinder six inches in diameter, 35 inches long and having a 0.028 inch wallthickness, is initially thoroughly cleaned. Typically, the article is subjected to a plurality of successive cleaning treatments in organic solvent, acid, and alkali in tanks 12, 14 and 16 with intermediate and final water rinses in rinse tank 18.

The solvent is typically trichloroethylene in the vapor phase at its boiling point. The acid is suitably a non-aggressive acid such as phosphoric acid optionally containing some chromic acid and the alkali comprises a non-aggressive alkali suchas trisodiumphosphate or carbonate buffered sodium hydroxide.

Methods of application of these pre-treatment steps may be by brush, spray, dip and/or gaseous infusion at a temperature necessary to promote complete removal of all organic and inorganic contaminants. Various forms of energy such as mechanicalagitation, ultrasonic radiation, superimposed electrical potentials, or combinations of the above may be employed in any of the operations. For purposes of illustration, the article 10 is shown as being subjected to various cleansing agents and rinsingby immersion.

The chemically cleaned titanium article 10 is then treated under conditions to form a microporous, roughened surface 22. Preferably a microporous chemical conversion coating 20 is formed to convert the titanium surface into a titanium compound,absent free titanium metal. The treatment is effectedly subjecting the article to an aqueous chemical conversion coating solution 26 in tank 24. This provides a better substrate for receiving and retaining the subsequently applied lubricant since theconversion layer is softer, microporous, more inert, chemically stable, non-reactive and more corrosion resistant than the untreated surface 22. Furthermore, conversion coated surfaces exhibit uniformly pleasing color.

The depth of penetration should be controlled since it is important to control and minimize dimensional change of parts having a narrow tolerance. A penetration of at least 0.01 mil will provide sufficient depth to retain enough coating materialfor lubrication and protection of the surfaces and usually penetration of over 1 mil should be avoided. Typically, about 0.5 mil penetration is very effective. No dimensional growth or change is achieved by this treatment, but simply formation of achemically converted, thin microporous zone extending inward from the original surface to a penetration depth of about 0.5 mil.

The conversion coating solutions generally contain a mixed salt complex formed from a Group I or Group II metal salt of a reactive anion such as phosphate, borate or chromate, a Group I or Group II metal halide and an acid, typically a hydrohalicacid. Typical bath compositions and conditions for treating titanium are presented in the following table.

TABLE I ______________________________________ Bath Composition Temperature Immersion Bath Grams Per Liter .degree. F pH Time, Min. ______________________________________ 1 50 Na.sub.3 PO.sub.4 . 12H.sub.2 O 185 5.1 to 5.2 10 20 KF .2H.sub.2 O 11.5 HF solution 2 50 Na.sub.3 PO.sub.4 . 12H.sub.2 O 80 <1.0 1 to 2 20 KF . 2H.sub.2 O 26 HF solution 3 40 Na.sub.2 B.sub.4 O.sub.7 . 10H.sub.2 O 185 6.3 to 6.6 20 18 KF . 2H.sub.2 O 16 HF solution ______________________________________

Sufficient deionized water was added in each case to .[.adjacent.]. .Iadd.adjust .Iaddend.the volume to one liter. The HF solution was a commercial 50.3 weight percent solution.

The conversion coatings from the bath compositions tabulated above are believed to primarily contain TiF.sub.4, KF, TiP and K.sub.3 PO.sub.4.

The conversion coated article is then dried and placed in a tank 30 containing the lubricant coating material 32 of Example 1 for about 30 seconds at 25.degree. C with moderate agitation from a blade mixer 34. On removal, a whitish film 36adhered to the titanium surface. The film was rubbed with clear cheesecloth for about one minute until no apparent evidence of the film remained on the surface. The surface coefficient of friction was dramatically lowered by the transparent lubricantfilm.

Referring now to FIG. 2, the finished tube 10 includes a base metal substrate 50 having a microporous chemically converted outer surface layer 52 and a transparent lubricant film 54 penetrated into the pores 56 of the layer 52 and forming anouter protective, lubricating film 54 extending over the layer 52.

The treated tube was heated to more than 500.degree. F and smoothly bent over a toll steel mandrel to form 90 degree elbows without .[.producing.]. .Iadd.rupturing .Iaddend.of the film 54. All other known lubricants for titanium have provenunsuccessful when subjected to the same deformation operation. Welding through the lubricant coating is convenient without any special changes in welding procedure.

The coating of the invention is also particularly adapted for use in corrosive environments such as coating titanium marine propeller blades and fasteners which otherwise would cold weld.

Another convincing demonstration of the excellent lubrication qualities of the coatings on titanium was with a commercially pure titanium nut and bolt. The bare nut turned very freely on the coated threads of the bolt. Many hundreds of repeatedtightening and loosening cycles of this standard common threaded nut and bolt have not changed the easy, low-friction movement of this test fastener. Previous lubricants or protectants required treatment of both mating surfaces, whereas the coating ofthe invention exhibits better performance when only one of the mating surfaces is treated. Contrast should be made with the data for repetitive tightening and loosening of titanium nuts and bolts of only 15.100 with the best of the previously knownlubricants.

The coating can be removed if desired by physical means such as directing a stream of abrasive at the coated surface or with strong solvents such as a room temperature mixture of HF and HNO.sub.3. The surface properties of the coating can bemodified by applying a secondary lubricant film thereto such as molybdenum disulfide or graphite.

It is to be understood that only preferred embodiments of the invention have been described and that numerous substitutions, modifications and alterations are all permissible without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as definedin the following claims.

* * * * *
 
 
  Recently Added Patents
Systems and methods for direction of communication traffic
Operational amplifier with extended common-mode input range
Immunomodulatory compositions containing an immunostimulatory sequence linked to antigen and methods of use thereof
Method and apparatus for line and path selection within SONET/SDH based networks
Exposure apparatus and device manufacturing method
Anti-inflammatory androstane derivative
Flexible coupling of motor-driven power steering
  Randomly Featured Patents
Accelerometer with improved support rim isolation
Method of manufacturing metal tubes
Sox-9 gene and protein and use in the regeneration of bone or cartilage
Method of improving the mechanical strength of glass
Crosslinked triacrylate polymer beads
Method for the removal of sulfur from carbonaceous material
Harness for long-term stretcher carry
Toy dog
Method and article having electroless metal plating
Acyl amidine and acyl, guanidine substituted biphenyl derivatives