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Measurements of Erosion Wear Volume Loss on Bare and Coated Polymer Matrix Composites

Authors :
Miyoshi, Kazuhisa
Sutter, James K
Mondry, Richard J
Bowman, Cheryl
Ma, Kong
Horan, Richard A
Naik, Subhash K
Cupp, Randall J
Publication Year :
2003
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2003.

Abstract

An investigation was conducted to examine the erosion behavior of uncoated and coated polymer matrix composite (PMC) specimens subjected to solid particle impingement using air jets. The PMCs were carbon-Kevlar (DuPont, Wilmington, DE) fiber-epoxy resin composites with a temperature capability up to 393 K (248 F). Tungsten carbide-cobalt (WC-Co) was the primary topcoat constituent. Bondcoats were applied to the PMC substrates to improve coating adhesion; then, erosion testing was performed at the University of Cincinnati. All erosion tests were conducted with Arizona road-dust (ARD), impinging at angles of 20 and 90 on both uncoated and two-layer coated PMCs at a velocity of 229 m/s and at a temperature of 366 K (200 F). ARD contains primarily 10-m aluminum oxide powders. Vertically scanning interference microscopy (noncontact, optical profilometry) was used to evaluate surface characteristics, such as erosion wear volume loss and depth, surface topography, and surface roughness. The results indicate that noncontact, optical interferometry can be used to make an accurate determination of the erosion wear volume loss of PMCs with multilayered structures while preserving the specimens. The two-layered (WC-Co topcoat and metal bondcoat) coatings on PMCs remarkably reduced the erosion volume loss by a factor of approximately 10. The tenfold increase in erosion resistance will contribute to longer PMC component lives, lower air friction, reduced related breakdowns, decreased maintenance costs, and increased PMC reliability. The decrease in the surface roughness of the coated vanes will lead to lower air friction and will subsequently reduce energy consumption. Eventually, the coatings could lead to overall economic savings.

Subjects

Subjects :
Nonmetallic Materials

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Notes :
WBS 22-708-31-14
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20040000868
Document Type :
Report