Tuning porous surface coatings using a plasma spray torch
US-11932946-B2 · Mar 19, 2024 · US
US12410504B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-12410504-B2 |
| Application number | US-202418437106-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Feb 8, 2024 |
| Priority date | Nov 10, 2021 |
| Publication date | Sep 9, 2025 |
| Grant date | Sep 9, 2025 |
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A system and method are provided to create porous surface coatings. In use, a surface material includes synthesized carbon-containing composite materials based on metallic particles and carbon particles, where the synthesized carbon-containing composite materials comprise a porosity characteristic, and satisfy at least one of: a heat transfer characteristic, a resistance to corrosion characteristic, or a non-ablative erosion characteristic. Additionally, the surface material includes a bonding layer disposed on a substrate to which the synthesized carbon-containing composite materials are bonded, and a surface layer comprising at least some of the synthesized carbon-containing composite materials, where a thermal characteristic of the surface layer is based on electron emissive cooling.
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What is claimed is: 1. An electron emissive cooling material, comprising: synthesized carbon-containing composite materials based on metallic particles and carbon particles; a bonding layer disposed on a substrate to which the synthesized carbon-containing composite materials are bonded; and a surface layer comprising at least some of the synthesized carbon-containing composite materials, wherein the surface layer is configured to have physical characteristics of deposition including a RMS roughness between the range of about 2.1 microns and about 4.7 microns and comprises: aligned carbon nanostructures with exposed edge planes oriented perpendicular to the surface layer; a hierarchical network of interconnected micropores and mesopores extending from the surface into the layer; and metal nanoparticles dispersed within a carbon matrix forming localized regions of enhanced electron work function. 2. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , wherein the bonding layer includes at least one of, a carbon-to-carbon bond, or a metal-to-carbon bond. 3. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , further comprising a porosity characteristic configured to: cause the surface layer to be hydraulically smooth; and to allow for the electron emissive cooling via the surface layer. 4. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , wherein a hydraulic smoothness of the surface layer reduces turbulent fluid flow on the surface layer. 5. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , wherein a hydraulic smoothness of the surface layer causes laminar fluid flow on the surface layer. 6. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , wherein the synthesized carbon-containing composite materials are configured to allow for repeated thermal stress. 7. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , wherein the synthesized carbon-containing composite materials are configured to be electrically conductive. 8. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , wherein the bonding layer is a non-uniform deposition of some or all of the synthesized carbon-containing composite materials. 9. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , wherein the synthesized carbon-containing composite materials are configured to allow for passive thermal control and active thermal control. 10. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 9 , wherein the passive thermal control is based, at least in part, on porosity characteristic. 11. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 9 , wherein the active thermal control is based, at least in part, on electron emissive cooling via the surface layer. 12. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , wherein the synthesized carbon-containing composite materials have a RMS roughness within a range between 2.1 micron to 4.7 micron. 13. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , wherein the synthesized carbon-containing composite materials have a melting point greater than 1500° C. 14. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , wherein the synthesized carbon-containing composite materials are resistant to oxidation at a temperature greater than 1500° C. 15. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , wherein the synthesized carbon-containing composite materials are configured to have a thermal conductivity less than a thermal conductivity of a non synthesized carbon-containing composite material. 16. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , wherein the bonding layer comprises a metal lattice. 17. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , wherein at least one of a porosity characteristic, a heat transfer characteristic, a resistance to corrosion characteristic, or a non-ablative erosion characteristic are configured to reduce a roughness of the surface layer. 18. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 17 , wherein the heat transfer characteristic is preconfigured. 19. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , wherein the synthesized carbon-containing composite materials include graphene. 20. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , wherein the synthesized carbon-containing composite materials are configured to optimize temperature redistribution across the surface layer. 21. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , wherein a thickness of the synthesized carbon-containing composite materials is less than 4 mm. 22. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , wherein the surface layer is configured to be hydraulically smooth. 23. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , wherein the synthesized carbon-containing composite materials are tuned to have a thermal conductivity less than a thermal conductivity of a non synthesized carbon-containing composite material. 24. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , wherein the surface layer and the at least some of the synthesized carbon-containing composite materials comprise covetic bonds. 25. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , wherein the at least some of the synthesized carbon-containing composite materials are in a depositable form to form the surface layer. 26. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , further comprising: a metal matrix; and carbon nanostructures dispersed within the metal matrix, wherein the carbon nanostructures have exposed edge planes oriented perpendicular to the surface layer and the metal matrix comprises metal nanoparticles with diameters between 0.1-50 nm forming regions with reduced electron work function. 27. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , wherein the physical characteristics of deposition include at least one of: a surface roughness profile with nanoscale features that enhance electron emission, a layered structure with alternating carbon-rich and metal-rich regions, a gradient in carbon concentration from the bonding layer to the surface layer, a network of interconnected pores extending from the surface layer towards the bonding layer, crystalline domains of carbon structures embedded within a metal matrix, oriented carbon structures that promote directional electron emission, regions of varying electrical conductivity throughout the surface layer, a distribution of carbon nanostructures with high aspect ratios within the surface layer, or localized areas of increased electron work function at the surface layer. 28. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , wherein the surface layer includes aligned carbon nanostructures with exposed edge planes oriented perpendicular to the surface layer, forming electron emission sites with reduced work function compared to basal plane orientation. 29. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , wherein the surface layer comprises a hierarchical pore structure with interconnected micropores and mesopores that form continuous electron transport pathways extending from the surface layer into the carbon matrix. 30. The electron emissive cooling material of claim 1 , wherein the surface layer includes a distribution of metal nanoparticles embedded within the carbon matrix, with the metal nanoparticles having diameters between 0.1 nm and 50 nm.
spraying and depositing by electrostatic forces only · CPC title
the material to be sprayed being originally a particulate material · CPC title
the material being originally a particulate material · CPC title
using microwave discharges · CPC title
using plasma jets · CPC title
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