Author/Authors :
Andre´ McDonald، نويسنده , , Sanjeev Chandra، نويسنده , , Christian Moreau، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Plasma-sprayed nickel and molybdenum particles
(*55 lm diameter) were photographed during
spreading on silicon wafers that were patterned with
micron-sized columns to make a textured rough surface.
Impact on grit-blasted glass was also studied. The surfaces
were maintained at either room temperature or at 350 C.
As the droplets approached the surface they were sensed by
a photodetector and, after a known delay, a fast chargecoupled
device (CCD) camera was triggered to capture
time-integrated images of the spreading splat. A rapid twocolor
pyrometer was used to collect the thermal radiation
from the spreading particles to record the evolution of their
temperature and calculate splat cooling rates. It was found
that micron-sized columns on the textured surfaces impeded
fluid flow during spreading of splats, promoting
splashing. When the column height was on the order of the
splat thickness, increasing the space between each column
increased the splat cooling rate as the columns penetrated
into the liquid splat, providing a larger surface area for heat
transfer. On the grit-blasted glass surfaces it was found that
as the surface roughness increased, the maximum spread
diameters of the molten droplets decreased, while the splat
cooling rates increased. Impact on non-heated and heated
roughened glass with similar roughness values produced
splats with approximately the same maximum spread
diameters, skewed morphologies, and cooling rates. On
smooth glass, the splat morphologies were circular, with
large maximum spread diameters and smaller cooling rates
on non-heated smooth glass. An established model was
used to estimate the splat-substrate thermal contact resistances.
On highly roughened glass, the thermal contact
resistance decreased as the glass roughness increased,
suggesting that splat-substrate contact was improved as the
molten metal penetrated the spaces between the large
asperities.