US20100124490A1 - Rotating member and method for coating the same - Google Patents

Rotating member and method for coating the same Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20100124490A1
US20100124490A1 US12/425,685 US42568509A US2010124490A1 US 20100124490 A1 US20100124490 A1 US 20100124490A1 US 42568509 A US42568509 A US 42568509A US 2010124490 A1 US2010124490 A1 US 2010124490A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
hard material
discharge
coating
rotating member
rotating
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
US12/425,685
Inventor
Hiroyuki Ochiai
Mitsutoshi Watanabe
Mikiya Arai
Shigeru Saburi
Tsuyoshi Yamakawa
Shogu Tsugumi
Jun Sakai
Akihiro Goto
Masao Akiyoshi
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
IHI Corp
Original Assignee
IHI Corp
Mitsubishi Electric Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from JP2002295966A external-priority patent/JP4096301B2/en
Application filed by IHI Corp, Mitsubishi Electric Corp filed Critical IHI Corp
Priority to US12/425,685 priority Critical patent/US20100124490A1/en
Publication of US20100124490A1 publication Critical patent/US20100124490A1/en
Assigned to IHI CORPORATION reassignment IHI CORPORATION ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: MITSUBISHI DENKI KABUSHIKI KAISHA
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C23COATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; CHEMICAL SURFACE TREATMENT; DIFFUSION TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL; INHIBITING CORROSION OF METALLIC MATERIAL OR INCRUSTATION IN GENERAL
    • C23CCOATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; SURFACE TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL BY DIFFUSION INTO THE SURFACE, BY CHEMICAL CONVERSION OR SUBSTITUTION; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL
    • C23C26/00Coating not provided for in groups C23C2/00 - C23C24/00
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C23COATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; CHEMICAL SURFACE TREATMENT; DIFFUSION TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL; INHIBITING CORROSION OF METALLIC MATERIAL OR INCRUSTATION IN GENERAL
    • C23CCOATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; SURFACE TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL BY DIFFUSION INTO THE SURFACE, BY CHEMICAL CONVERSION OR SUBSTITUTION; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL
    • C23C26/00Coating not provided for in groups C23C2/00 - C23C24/00
    • C23C26/02Coating not provided for in groups C23C2/00 - C23C24/00 applying molten material to the substrate
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F01MACHINES OR ENGINES IN GENERAL; ENGINE PLANTS IN GENERAL; STEAM ENGINES
    • F01DNON-POSITIVE DISPLACEMENT MACHINES OR ENGINES, e.g. STEAM TURBINES
    • F01D11/00Preventing or minimising internal leakage of working-fluid, e.g. between stages
    • F01D11/08Preventing or minimising internal leakage of working-fluid, e.g. between stages for sealing space between rotor blade tips and stator
    • F01D11/12Preventing or minimising internal leakage of working-fluid, e.g. between stages for sealing space between rotor blade tips and stator using a rubstrip, e.g. erodible. deformable or resiliently-biased part
    • F01D11/122Preventing or minimising internal leakage of working-fluid, e.g. between stages for sealing space between rotor blade tips and stator using a rubstrip, e.g. erodible. deformable or resiliently-biased part with erodable or abradable material
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F01MACHINES OR ENGINES IN GENERAL; ENGINE PLANTS IN GENERAL; STEAM ENGINES
    • F01DNON-POSITIVE DISPLACEMENT MACHINES OR ENGINES, e.g. STEAM TURBINES
    • F01D5/00Blades; Blade-carrying members; Heating, heat-insulating, cooling or antivibration means on the blades or the members
    • F01D5/12Blades
    • F01D5/28Selecting particular materials; Particular measures relating thereto; Measures against erosion or corrosion
    • F01D5/288Protective coatings for blades
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02TCLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES RELATED TO TRANSPORTATION
    • Y02T50/00Aeronautics or air transport
    • Y02T50/60Efficient propulsion technologies, e.g. for aircraft

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a rotating/rotatable member such as a blade or labyrinth seal for use in a gas turbine, steam turbine, compressor or the like, and a method for coating the rotating/rotatable member. More particularly, it relates to a rotating/rotatable member on a part of which a coating film including a hard material is formed, and a method for coating the rotating/rotatable member.
  • a clearance between a rotating section and a stationary section such as a chip clearance between the blade and a casing or a shroud, or a seal clearance between the labyrinth seal and a honeycomb seal, needs to be kept/set to be appropriate during operation of a gas turbine.
  • efficiency of the gas turbine drops.
  • a tip end of the rotating member breaks and causes trouble for the gas turbine.
  • a tip end of a blade or of a labyrinth seal is coated with an abrasive coating of a relatively hard material for chipping off the material of a contact surface of the surrounding member.
  • the surrounding member is coated with an abradable coating of a material, which is relatively easily chipped. Accordingly, chip clearance or seal clearance is adjusted so as to be minimized so that a side of the surrounding member is chipped off by the tip end of the rotating member when driving the gas turbine thereby taking advantage of a hardness difference of the coatings.
  • FIG. 1A is a perspective view of a usual turbine blade
  • FIG. 1B is a perspective view of the turbine blade with a chip shroud
  • FIG. 1C is a perspective view of a compressor blade.
  • a platform or a dovetail on a turbine disk side is omitted from these figures.
  • a turbine blade 1 shown in FIG. 1A
  • the whole surface of a blade tip end is coated with an abrasive coating 5 a .
  • a turbine blade 2 provided with a chip shroud 3 shown in FIG.
  • the whole surfaces of the tip ends of chip fins 4 disposed on a chip shroud 3 are coated with abrasive coatings 5 b .
  • an abrasive coating 5 c is applied over the region of the blade tip end (including the backside of the figure).
  • FIG. 2 is a sectional view showing one example of a labyrinth seal tip end.
  • the labyrinth seal is disposed in the clearance between a rotating section and a stationary section to prevent leakage of air or combustion gas, and is a seal structure frequently used in a gas turbine and compressor.
  • an annular labyrinth seal 6 including concave/convex portion is disposed on a rotating section side, and a honeycomb seal (not shown) including a structure easy to be chipped off is disposed on a stationary section side.
  • FIG. 1 is a sectional view showing one example of a labyrinth seal tip end.
  • the labyrinth seal is disposed in the clearance between a rotating section and a stationary section to prevent leakage of air or combustion gas, and is a seal structure frequently used in a gas turbine and compressor.
  • an annular labyrinth seal 6 including concave/convex portion is disposed on a rotating section side
  • a honeycomb seal (not shown)
  • FIG. 2 illustrates a sectional view cut in a plane including a center axis of the labyrinth seal 6 , and an abrasive coating 5 d is applied to the tip end of the convex portion of the labyrinth seal 6 .
  • abrasive coatings have heretofore been applied by methods such as welding, thermal spraying, and plating (e.g., see References 1 and 2).
  • a welding rod or a powder body is used to coat predetermined portions, such as the tip end of the turbine blade or the labyrinth seal.
  • zirconia is thermally sprayed, which has a small difference in thermal expansion from a mother material and whose hardness is relatively high (Vickers hardness of 1300 HV).
  • abrasive grains (Vickers hardness of 4500 HV) of cubic boron nitride (cBN), which are high in hardness, are electrically attached by nickel plating.
  • the coating method discharge is performed between the rotating member and an electrode on first discharge conditions so that the electrode is consumed, and the electrode is formed in accordance with the shape of a coating film forming portion. Thereafter, the coating film is formed by discharge between the electrode and the rotating member on second discharge conditions. Then, even when the electrode is not processed beforehand for a product shape, a coating object portion can still be appropriately coated.
  • the electrode On the first discharge conditions for consuming the electrode, the electrode is set to have a minus polarity, a pulse width is set to 1 ⁇ s or less, and a current value is set to 10 A or less.
  • the electrode is preferably set to have minus polarity, the pulse width is set to be 2 to 10 ⁇ s, and the current value is set to be 5 to 20 A.
  • coating has been performed by plating or by thermal spraying. Therefore, during production (manufacturing) of the labyrinth seal, coating pretreatments, such as a blast process and a process of attaching a masking tape, are required before coating is performed, and coating post-treatments, such as a process of removing the masking tape, are required after coating is performed. Therefore, the operation time required for the production (manufacturing) of the labyrinth seal lengthens, and, therefore, it is not easy to improve productivity of the labyrinth seal.
  • the abrasive coat cannot be firmly attached to the tip edge of a seal fin. Therefore, a problem has been encountered in that the abrasive coat easily peels off the tip edge of the seal fin and the quality of the labyrinth seal is not stable.
  • a first object of the present invention is to provide a rotating/rotatable member that does not require any pretreatment or post-treatment, and which has good adhesion, and which is coated with a precise abrasive coating of a relatively hard material (hereinafter, referred to as a “hard material” in the present specification for the sake of convenience) compared to the material of an opponent component that contacts with the rotating/rotatable member during rotation.
  • a method for coating the rotating/rotatable member is also provided.
  • the first object of the invention is also to provide a method for forming a long-service-life coating in tests of high cycle fatigue (HCF) or low cycle fatigue (LCF) for an abrasive coated component.
  • a second object of the present invention is to provide a rotating/rotatable member wherein the area of coating of the hard material is optimized to enhance the yield and to provide a method for coating the rotating member in accordance with the second object of the present invention.
  • a third object of the present invention is to provide a rotating/rotatable member in which the operation time required for production of a labyrinth seal is reduced and in which productivity of labyrinth components can be improved.
  • a method for coating the rotating/rotatable member is provided.
  • a method for coating a rotating/rotatable member comprising the steps of: generating a pulsed discharge between a rotating/rotatable member formed into a predetermined shape and a discharge electrode of a green compact in dielectric liquid or gas to transfer a hard material of the discharge electrode or a hard material changed from a material of the discharge electrode onto the rotating/rotatable member by each discharge pulse so that a hard concavity and convexity is formed on the rotating/rotatable member, wherein the green compact includes the hard material or the material changing into the hard material by the discharge; and repeatedly generating the discharge pulse to form on the rotating/rotatable member a hard coating film having concavity and convexity.
  • the hard coating film is an abrasive coating film that is formed on a part of the rotating/rotatable member and that rubs against and shaves an opponent component.
  • the coating film or a layer having good adhesion can be formed and used as a coating, and the coating film contains remarkably hard materials such as a cubic boron nitride (cBN), and a hard coating film and a coating film having good abrasive properties can be formed. Abrasive properties of the coating are improved by treatment on a condition for forming a coating having a coarse surface.
  • cBN cubic boron nitride
  • the method comprises the steps of: generating a discharge between the rotating/rotatable member and the discharge electrode on a first discharge condition on which the discharge electrode is consumed so that the shape of the discharge electrode is made to conform to the shape of the coating film forming portion on the rotating/rotatable member; and, thereafter generating a discharge between the discharge electrode and the rotating/rotatable member on a second discharge condition to form the coating film on the rotating/rotatable member.
  • the discharge electrode has a minus polarity, a pulse width of 1 ⁇ s or less, and a current value of 10 A or less
  • the discharge electrode has a minus polarity, the pulse width is 2 to 10 ⁇ s, and the current value is 5 to 20 A.
  • the coating film is preferably formed on the tip end of the rotating/rotatable member.
  • the discharge electrode of the green compact contains one of, or a mixture, of cBN, TiC, TiN, TiAlN, TiB 2 , WC, Cr 3 C 2 , SiC, ZrC, VC, B 4 C, Si 3 N 4 , ZrO 2 —Y, and Al 2 O 3 .
  • the material forming the hard member by the discharge is preferably one of, or a mixture of, Ti, Cr, W, V, Zr, Si, Mo, and Nb, and these materials are formed into carbide by the discharge in an oil in order to form a hard coating film.
  • a coating film containing TiC, WC, or cBN is preferably formed on the rotating/rotatable member that is driven at a low temperature, and a coating film containing cBN or Cr 3 C 2 is used in the rotating member that is driven at a high temperature, and a coating film containing ZrO 2 —Y or Al 2 O 3 is formed on the rotating/rotatable member that is driven at an even further higher temperature.
  • a method of enhancing fatigue strength of a coated surface A coating film that does not easily stretch, as compared with a mother material, is formed on the surface. Then, because a thin coating film bears a tensile load, the coating film on the surface cracks easily.
  • the coating film on the surface cracks easily.
  • a ratio of a coated area coated with the hard material in a coating film forming portion to a portion not coated with the hard material in the coating film forming portion is such that coverage is suppressed, wherein the not coated providing ductility is scattered and left in the coated area ( FIG. 4 ), and thereby ductility is provided for the coating film.
  • the discharge electrode is made to contain a metal that does not easily form carbide. Accordingly, a portion of the metal that does not easily form carbide is scattered in the coating film and has ductility, and by forming a portion between the hard materials ductility is provided to the coating film.
  • a porous coating film mainly formed of a metal, is formed as a base. Thereafter, since the coating film containing the hard material is formed on the porous coating film, cracking of the coating layer is prevented from developing into cracking into the mother material.
  • the surface of the coating layer is peened, and residual stress of compression persists after peening. Thus, even when the mother material stretches, tensile stress is reduced.
  • These fifth to seventh, and ninth inventions are effective not only for forming a coating with hard material but also for the discharge surface treatment for forming the coating film on the surface, such as when forming a wear-resistant coating.
  • the eighth invention because a remarkably hard ceramic, usable in the coating of the hard material, is provided, it is possible to provide a coating formed of an effective hard material.
  • a rotating/rotatable member having an abrasive coating film formed on a part thereof that is formed by a pulsed discharge between the rotating/rotatable member and a discharge electrode of a green compact in dielectric liquid or gas, wherein the green compact includes a hard material or a material that changes into a hard material by the discharge, and the abrasive coating film includes the hard material of the green compact or the hard material that is changed from the material of the green compact by the discharge.
  • the rotating/rotatable member is characterized in that the pretreatments, such as a masking or a blast process, or the post-treatments, such as grinding, are not necessary and the coating film or the layer having good adhesion is formed.
  • the coating film is preferably formed on the tip end of the rotating/rotatable member.
  • the discharge is caused between the rotating/rotatable member and the discharge electrode in the dielectric liquid or gas to form an abrasive coating film, including hard material, on a part of the rotating/rotatable member so that the rotating/rotatable member is formed to be superior in abrasive properties.
  • the coating film having ductility is formed, the layer for preventing development of cracks is formed between the mother material and the coating film, and the coating layer, which is strong against pull forces, is formed so that the rotating member is provided with high fatigue strength.
  • a remarkably hard ceramic, usable in the coating of the hard material is provided and, accordingly, the rotating/rotatable member is provided with good abrasive properties.
  • a rotating/rotatable member wherein only the vicinity of a portion of the rotating/rotatable member that has a possibility of coming into contact with a component disposed opposite to the rotating/rotatable member is coated with hard material. Accordingly, a rotating/rotatable member is obtained that requires little in labor of operation, is small in the amount of electrode use, exhibits a good yield of products, and that is low in cost.
  • a rotating/rotatable member is provided that is coated in a method for enhancing the abrasive properties of the tenth to 17th inventions.
  • the rotating/rotatable member is coated under conditions for forming a coarse surface roughness in order to enhance the abrasive properties of the coated rotating member.
  • a 19th invention provides a concrete example of the 16th invention, wherein there is provided a blade whose tip end is coated with hard material. Only a corner of the blade in a rotation advance direction and a portion in the vicinity of the corner are coated with the hard material.
  • the range of the coating of the hard material is optimized, the yield is improved, the operation time is shortened, and the coating material can be coated efficiently without waste.
  • a 20th invention provides a concrete example of the 17th invention, wherein a rotating/rotatable member is provided in which the coating film is formed on not all, but some of the blades of a rotor or a blisk.
  • the rotating/rotatable member is a rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component that is one of the structure elements of a labyrinth seal structure that suppresses leak of a gas or liquid between a stationary component and a rotating component.
  • the rotating/rotatable member comprises an annular seal component main body, and an annular seal fin integrally formed on an outer peripheral surface of the seal component main body, and a tip edge of the seal fin is coated with hard material.
  • an electrode for coating having consumability is used, a pulsed discharge is caused between the electrode for coating and the tip edge of the seal fin in dielectric liquid or gas, and the coat includes the hard material formed of a constituting material of the electrode for coating formed on the tip edge of the seal fin by discharge energy or of a reactant of the constituting material.
  • the phrase “electrode for coating having consumability” means a green compact electrode (including a thermally treated green compact electrode) obtained by compression molding of a powdered metal (including a metal compound), a mixed material of the powdered metal and a powdered ceramic, or a powdered ceramic having conductivity.
  • the phrase “electrode for coating having consumability” also means a silicon electrode formed of solid silicon. It is to be noted that, in accordance with the present invention, the ceramic having conductivity is appropriately subjected to a surface treatment.
  • the coat of hard material is a coating film including a hard material constituted of the constituting material of the electrode for coating, or a reactant of the constituting material, formed on the tip edge of the seal fin by discharge energy generated between the electrode for coating and the tip edge of the seal fin without performing plating or thermal spraying. Therefore, during production of the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component, coating pretreatments, such as a blast treatment and a process of attaching a masking tape, and coating post-treatments, such as a process of removing the masking tape, are unnecessary.
  • the coat of hard material coated by discharge energy and a mother body of the seal fin has alloy composition changing properties (i.e., alloy composition changes depending on the position), the coat of hard material can be firmly connected to the tip edge of the seal fin.
  • the coat of hard material includes a plurality of local coating films locally formed on a plurality of portions in a peripheral direction to the tip edge of the seal fin.
  • the coat of hard material includes a plurality of local coats.
  • the coating film including hard material constituted of the constituting material of the electrode for coating, or the reactant of the constituting material is locally formed on a plurality of portions of the peripheral direction in the tip edge of the seal fin, but not in the whole periphery of the tip edge of the seal fin. Therefore, the electrode for coating can be formed in a small and simple shape in accordance with the size or the shape of the portion to be treated of the tip edge of the seal fin. Moreover, the amount of electrode material used from the electrode for coating can be reduced.
  • the entire rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component can be provided with sufficient abrasive properties by just the local coat of the plurality of hard materials without having to coat the whole periphery of the tip edge of the seal fin with hard material.
  • the electrode for coating is the green compact electrode obtained by compression molding of powdered metal, the mixed material of the powdered metal and the powdered ceramic, or the powdered ceramic having conductivity, or the solid silicon electrode.
  • the ceramic is one of, or a mixture of, cBN, Cr 3 C 2 , TiC, TiN, TiAlN, TiB 2 , ZrO 2 —Y, ZrC, VC, B 4 C, WC, SiC, Si 3 N 4 , and Al 2 O 3 .
  • the “powdered metal” also includes a powdered metal compound. It is to be noted that, in accordance with the present invention, a ceramic that does not have conductivity may be appropriately subjected to a surface treatment so as to secure conductivity.
  • a labyrinth seal structure that suppresses a leakage of a gas or liquid between a stationary component and a rotating component, comprising: a stationary-side seal component integrally disposed on the stationary component; an annular seal component main body that is disposed inside the stationary-side seal component and that is capable of rotating integrally with the rotating/rotatable component and which is integrally disposed on the rotating/rotatable component; an annular seal fin integrally formed on an outer peripheral surface of the seal component main body; and a hard coat formed on the tip edge of the seal fin, wherein the hard coat is a coating film including a hard material constituted of a constituting material, or a reactant of the constituting material, of an electrode for coating formed on the tip edge of the seal fin by discharge energy of a pulsed discharge between the electrode for coating and the tip edge of the seal fin, and the electrode for coating has consumability.
  • the phrase “stationary-side seal component” includes a honeycomb-shaped stationary honeycomb seal component, or a stationary abradable seal component whose inside is coated with an abradable coat.
  • the phrase “electrode for coating having consumability” means a green compact electrode (including a thermally treated green compact electrode) obtained by compression molding of a powdered metal (including a metal compound), a mixed material of a powdered metal and a powdered ceramic, or a powdered ceramic having conductivity.
  • the phrase “electrode for coating having consumability” also means a silicon electrode formed of solid silicon. It is to be noted that for ceramic that does not have conductivity, the surface of a ceramic powder that does not have conductivity is then subjected to a treatment for forming a conductive coating film so as to appropriately secure conductivity for the ceramic powder.
  • the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component includes a coat of hard material. Therefore, when integrally rotating the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component with the rotating/rotatable component, even when the stationary-side seal component is deformed, when the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component contacts the stationary-side seal component, the stationary-side seal component is simply shaved by the coat of hard material in the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component, whereas the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component is hardly shaved at all.
  • the clearance between the stationary-side seal and the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component is inhibited from increasing during rotation of the rotating/rotatable component, and the seal effect of the labyrinth seal structure can be kept in an appropriate state.
  • the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component is set so as to slightly contact with the stationary-side seal component during initial rotation of the rotating/rotatable component. Accordingly, during or after the initial rotation, the clearance between the stationary-side seal component and the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component can be reduced as much as possible, and the seal effect of the labyrinth seal structure can be further enhanced.
  • the coat of hard material is the coating film, including the hard material constituted of the constituting material of the electrode for coating of or the reactant of the constituting material, that is formed on the tip edge of the seal fin by discharge energy generated between the electrode for coating and the tip edge of the seal fin without performing plating or thermal spraying. Therefore, during production of the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component, the coating pretreatments, such as the blast treatment and the process of attaching the masking tape, and the coating post-treatments, such as the process of removing the masking tape are, unnecessary. Furthermore, because the boundary portion between the coat of hard material coated by discharge energy and the mother material of the seal fin has alloy composition changing properties, the coat of hard material can be connected firmly to the tip edge of the seal fin.
  • the coat of hard material includes a plurality of local coating films locally formed on a plurality of portions in the peripheral direction of the tip edge of the seal fin.
  • the coat of hard material includes a plurality of local coats of hard material.
  • the coating film which includes hard material constituted of the constituting material of the electrode for coating or the reactant of the constituting material, is formed locally on a plurality of portions to be treated in the peripheral direction of the tip edge of the seal fin, and not in the whole periphery of the tip edge of the seal fin. Therefore, the electrode for coating can be formed into a small and simple shape in accordance with the size or shape of the portion to be treated in the tip edge of the seal fin. Moreover, the amount of the electrode material used by the electrode for coating can be reduced.
  • the entire rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal components can be provided with sufficient abrasive properties by local coats of the plurality of hard materials without coating the whole periphery of the tip edge of the seal fin with hard material.
  • a method for manufacturing a rotating/rotatable member of a blade or a labyrinth member comprising: a first step of forming a forged material or a casted material into a predetermined shape by mechanical processing; and a second step of generating a pulsed discharge between a rotating/rotatable member formed into a predetermined shape and a discharge electrode of a green compact or solid silicon in dielectric liquid or gas in order to transfer hard material of the discharge electrode or hard material changed from a material of the discharge electrode onto the rotating/rotatable member by each discharge pulse so that a hard concavity and convexity is formed on the rotating/rotatable member, wherein the green compact includes the hard material or the material changing into the hard material by the discharge, and repeatedly generating the discharge pulse to form on the rotating/rotatable member a hard coating film having the concavity and convexity.
  • an abrasive coating film which rubs against and shaves an opponent component, is formed as the hard coating film on a part of the rotating/rotatable member.
  • a method for manufacturing the rotating/rotatable member wherein the second step comprises the steps of forming a discharge electrode into a shape in accordance with the shape of a predetermined portion of the rotating/rotatable member.
  • a method for providing discharge conditions so that the shape of the discharge electrode conforms to that of the coating film forming portion of the rotating/rotatable member in order to form the electrode without any trouble is provided.
  • a discharge condition is controlled to set a coverage to be 95% or less in the coating film forming portion, wherein the coverage is a ratio of an area at which the coating film including the hard material is formed.
  • a method of manufacturing the rotating/rotatable member wherein the ratio of the coverage is controlled to provide the rotating/rotatable member with the characteristic does not easily collapse from fatigue.
  • a method for manufacturing the rotating/rotatable member so that the rotating/rotatable member does not easily collapse from fatigue wherein in the second step, a green compact electrode containing 5% or more by volume of a metal that does not easily react into carbide is used to perform the discharge.
  • a method for manufacturing the rotating/rotatable member so that the rotating/rotatable member does not easily collapse from fatigue wherein the second step comprises the steps of: forming a porous coating film on a coating film forming portion of the rotating/rotatable member; and thereafter forming the coating film including the hard material on the porous coating film.
  • the second step comprises the steps of: forming a porous coating film on a coating film forming portion of the rotating/rotatable member; and thereafter forming the coating film including the hard material on the porous coating film.
  • a method for manufacturing the rotating/rotatable member superior in abrasive properties by using the appropriate discharge electrode material of the green compact in the second step.
  • a method of manufacturing the rotating/rotatable member so that the rotating/rotatable member does not easily collapse from fatigue further comprising: a third step of subjecting the coating film formed in the second step to a peening treatment.
  • FIG. 1A is a perspective view of a typical turbine blade
  • FIG. 1B is a perspective view of the turbine blade provided with a chip shroud
  • FIG. 1C is a perspective view of a compressor blade
  • FIG. 2 is a perspective view showing one example of a conventional labyrinth seal tip end
  • FIG. 3 is a diagram showing a first embodiment of a rotating/rotatable member and coating method of the present invention
  • FIG. 4 is a diagram showing a second embodiment of the rotating/rotatable member and coating method of the present invention.
  • FIG. 5 is a diagram showing a third embodiment of the rotating/rotatable member and coating method of the present invention.
  • FIG. 6 is a diagram showing a fourth embodiment of the rotating/rotatable member and coating method of the present invention.
  • FIGS. 7A , 7 B, and 7 C are perspective views of the turbine blade according to a fifth embodiment of the rotating/rotatable member of the present invention.
  • FIGS. 8A , 8 B, and 8 C are perspective views of the turbine blade provided with a chip shroud according to a sixth embodiment of the rotating/rotatable member of the present invention.
  • FIGS. 9A , and 9 B are perspective views of the compressor blade according to a seventh embodiment of the rotating/rotatable member of the present invention.
  • FIG. 10 is a diagram showing the fifth embodiment of the coating method according to the present invention.
  • FIG. 11 is a schematic diagram of a labyrinth seal structure according to an eighth embodiment of the rotating/rotatable member of the present invention.
  • FIG. 12 is a front view of a labyrinth seal of FIG. 11 ;
  • FIG. 13 is a schematic diagram of a discharge processing machine according to the eighth embodiment of the coating method according to the present invention.
  • FIG. 3 is a diagram showing a first embodiment of a rotating/rotatable member and coating method of the present invention. This figure shows that the tip end of blade 1 , for use in a gas turbine or a compressor, is coated with a hard material.
  • the blade 1 and a discharge electrode 11 that includes cubic boron nitride (cBN) are submerged in a processing tank 12 filled with dielectric liquid (oil).
  • a pulsed discharge is caused between the tip end of the blade 1 and the discharge electrode 11 by a power supply for discharge 14 in order to melt the discharge electrode 11 .
  • a part of the electrode is consequently welded to the tip end of the blade 1 to form a cBN-containing coating film 10 .
  • the blade 1 and discharge electrode 11 are shown, however, the blade 1 is fixed by a blade fixing jig, and the discharge electrode 11 is fixed by an electrode fixing jig (not shown). It is to be noted that FIG.
  • FIG. 3 shows an example of the blade, but a labyrinth seal, which is the same kind of rotating/rotatable member, can also be coated with hard material in accordance with a similar method.
  • reference numeral 13 denotes the blade fixing jig.
  • cBN is used as a hard material
  • cBN is a coating material optimum for a turbine blade that is exposed at a high temperature in that Vickers hardness is 4500 HV at room temperature, and Vickers hardness close to 2000 HV can be maintained even at high temperature of 900° C. or more.
  • a hard material of TiC, WC can be used in those rotating members used at a low temperature
  • Cr 3 C 2 can be used in those rotating members for use at a high temperature
  • ZrO 2 —Y or Al 2 O 3 can be used in those rotating/rotatable members for use at an even further high temperature.
  • a coating film containing TiC, WC, or cBN is formed on the rotating/rotatable member for use at low temperature
  • a coating film containing cBN or Cr 3 C 2 is used in rotating/rotatable members for use at high temperature
  • a coating film containing ZrO 2 —Y or Al 2 O 3 is formed on the rotating/rotatable member for use at even further high temperature.
  • these hard materials may also be mixed together to form an optimum coating film.
  • a discharge coating technique is disclosed, for example, in “Surface Treatment Method of Metal Material by In-liquid Discharge” of Japanese Laid-Open Patent Publication No. 7-197275, and the description provided therein is omitted.
  • the discharge electrode containing such ceramics can be formed by use of a conductive binder.
  • a conductive binder for example, Co-based alloy powder can be used as the conductive binder, and ceramic powder such as cBN may be mixed with the Co-based alloy powder, charged in a press mold, and compressed/molded. It is to be noted that the amount of binder is preferably about 50% or more by a volume ratio of the mixture.
  • a powder of ceramics such as cBN
  • Ti titanium
  • Ni nickel
  • Co cobalt
  • a particle diameter of the whole powder needs to be smaller than the pole distance between the electrode and the work undergoing the discharge surface treatment, and is, therefore, preferably about 10 ⁇ m or less.
  • the powder of ceramics, such as cBN can be easily coated with a thin coating film of Ti, Ni, or Co metal by vapor deposition.
  • the discharge electrode containing ceramics, such as cBN When the conductive binder is mixed, and the discharge electrode containing ceramics, such as cBN, is formed in this manner, a discharge can be caused in a portion of the binder so that the discharge electrode is brought into a molten state by heat energy, and a part of the discharge electrode can then be welded/attached to the tip end of the rotating member, such as the blade.
  • the tip end of the rotating/rotatable member can be coated with a hard coating film containing ceramics such as cBN.
  • Table 1 shows results of a wear test in which two test pieces (upper and lower test pieces), wherein only the lower test piece is coated by the coating method of the present invention, are ground (rubbed) with each other at high temperature.
  • the upper test piece is RENE77, which is a nickel-based alloy
  • the lower test piece is cBN, which is the coating film made in accordance with the present invention.
  • the conditions employed were temperature: 800 degrees centigrade; surface pressure: 7 MPa; cycle number: 10 7 cycles; and amplitude: 0.35 mm.
  • a wear amount of 600 ⁇ m or more is measured on the Ni alloy, but no wear is detected on the coating film of cBN. From this result, it is seen that cBN is superior in abrasive properties because it wore down the Ni alloy.
  • the Ni alloy of the upper test piece is an alloy constituted of a component ratio of Ni: 57%, Cr: 15%, Co: 15%, Mo: 5%, Ti: 3.5%, Al: 4.4, C, 0.1%.
  • the hard coat can be applied easily by use of characteristics of the ceramics such as cBN, and a coating film, having good adhesion and quality level, can be coated as compared to conventional methods such as by welding and by thermal spraying.
  • a thin coating film (or a layer) having a thickness of several microns to 30 ⁇ m can be formed, the coating film is not easily cracked, and precision of the thickness can be controlled by a unit of several p.m. Therefore, it is possible to provide a coating method optimum for precision components, such as the blade and labyrinth seal.
  • Coarser surface roughness corresponding to abrasive properties for shaving the opponent component to be ground, is preferable.
  • the surface roughness is coarser than 1.2 ⁇ mRa.
  • the so-called discharge coating method is used in the present invention, pretreatments (such as the masking and blast process) are unnecessary, and a coating film having good adhesion can be easily and inexpensively formed. Furthermore, a coating film containing ceramics, such as cubic boron nitride (cBN), can be coated. Therefore, a portion of the rotating/rotatable member requiring abrasive properties can be coated with a hard coating film that is superior in abrasive properties.
  • cBN cubic boron nitride
  • a coating layer of the hard material is hard, but has little ductility. Therefore, a tensile stress applied to the component coated with the hard material is not borne by the mother material of the component when the component has a large ductility. Instead, the tensile stress is borne only by the coating layer of the surface, which coats the component. Therefore, the surface (i.e., the coating layer) cracks, and there is a possibility that the crack will develop into the mother material. To avoid this cracking, a method of imparting ductility to the otherwise hard coating layer is used.
  • Table 2 shows the number of cycles reaching destruction in a high cycle fatigue (HCF) test in which an outer diameter of a round rod is coated with the hard material and a tensile load is going to be repeated in an axial direction. Without any coating of hard material, the round rod material does not break up to one million cycles. However, when a coating in which the ratio of coated area coated with hard material of the coating surface is 98% (that is, when the ratio of coverage of coated portions 100 to uncoated portions 101 of an area coated with the coating film is 98% of the coated surface (i.e., coated area) instead of 95% or less as shown in FIG. 4 ), the round rod material is observed to break at 20 thousand cycles. However, when the coverage is decreased to about 95%, as shown in Table 2, the round rod material does not break up to one million cycles.
  • HCF high cycle fatigue
  • the abrasive properties of the whole coating surface are slightly sacrificed in order to increase the ductility of the coating surface.
  • ductility decreases as evident from Table 2, and fatigue strength drops.
  • fatigue strength does not drop in a large manner (if at all), although the abrasive properties drop a little.
  • discharge time is reduced to a range in which complete discharge does not occur, and in this way the coverage can be reduced.
  • the coating treatment is usually performed for a time of five minutes/square centimeter, but the time may be reduced to about 3.8 minutes/square centimeter.
  • Time for obtaining a coverage of 95% time for obtaining a coverage of 98%*LOG(1 ⁇ 0.95)/LOG(1 ⁇ 0.98).
  • a coverage of 98% is regarded as a coverage of 100% for the purpose of the calculation equation.
  • 0.98 in LOG(1 ⁇ 0.98) is changed to 0.5.
  • ductile properties of the metal may be imparted to the coating layer.
  • the electrode contains 5% or more of such a metal that is not easily carbonized, 5% or more of a portion having the ductility in the coating layer remains, and an effect similar to that of Table 2 can be expected.
  • the abrasive properties of the whole coating surface are slightly sacrificed in order to enhance the ductility of the coating layer. Examples of metals that are not easily carbonized include cobalt, nickel, and iron. With respect to coverage, one blade has been described. However, there are a large number of blades in a turbine.
  • a porous layer is formed as a base for the coating layer of hard material in order to prevent the cracking of the coating layer from developing and then progressing into the mother material.
  • the porous layer is formed as a base, and is disposed under the coating layer, which is formed on the porous layer. This base is also formed by discharge coating.
  • the porous layer having a thickness of 0.05 mm or more can be formed by using a second electrode obtained by compression molding of a powder of metals such as Stellite. Thereafter, the porous layer is coated with hard material.
  • FIGS. 7A to 7C , 8 A to 8 C, 9 A and 9 B are perspective views showing fifth to seventh embodiments of the rotating/rotatable member of the present invention. It is to be noted that in these figures, a platform or a dovetail on a disk side is omitted from the drawings.
  • the corner of the blade in a rotation advance direction that is, the blade tip end of the blade surface on the back side
  • a tip end surface are coated with a coating 20 of hard material.
  • the blade tip end of the blade surface on the back side and the entire tip end surface are coated, and the opposite surface may not be coated.
  • the blade tip end of the blade surface on the back side is coated, and the entire tip end surface is not coated.
  • the corner of the tip end of a chip fin 4 in the rotation advance direction, or the surface of the chip fin 4 in the rotation advance direction (that is, the backside surface of the tip end of the chip fin 4 ) are coated with a coating 21 of hard material.
  • the chip shroud 3 is disposed to prevent resonance of the blades 2 at the time of high-speed rotation of the gas turbine and to prevent a high-temperature gas from leaking to the outside of the blades 2 .
  • the entire surface of the tip end and the surface of the rotation advance direction i.e., on the backside surface of the tip end of the chip fin 4
  • the opposite surface may not be coated.
  • the surface of the rotation advance direction i.e., the backside surface of the tip end
  • the whole surface of the tip end is not coated.
  • the corner of the blade in the rotation advance direction (that is, the blade tip end of a blade surface on the front side) and the tip end surface are coated with a coating 22 of hard material.
  • the surface of the rotation advance direction (that is, the blade tip end of a blade surface on the front side is coated), and the entire surface of the tip end is not coated.
  • an abrasive property test was carried out by simulation of an actual device wherein, a difference was not observed in the abrasive property.
  • the coating of hard material is applied so as to shave the abradable coating of the opposite component by using the tip ends of the blades 1 , 2 thereby taking advantage of the hardness difference, at the time of driving the blades 1 , 2 , to maintain a minimum chip clearance.
  • the abradable coating is applied on the casing or the shroud (i.e., opposite components).
  • this phenomenon starts by contact occurring between the casing, or the shroud, and the corners of the blades 1 , 2 in the rotation advance direction, and the phenomenon ends when the casing or the shroud is shaved by the corners of the blades 1 , 2 . That is, after contact of the corner with the casing or shroud, another portion of the same blade hardly contacts the casing or the shroud.
  • the coating of hard material does not have to be applied over the entire region of the blade tip end as in the related art discussed above.
  • FIG. 10 is a diagram showing a fifth embodiment of the coating method according to the present invention, and is a diagram showing the coating method of the blades shown in FIGS. 7A to 7C .
  • the blade 1 and a discharge electrode 23 are submerged in the processing tank 12 filled with the dielectric liquid (oil), the discharge electrode 23 is disposed in the vicinity of the corner in the rotation advance direction of the blade 1 , a discharge is caused between them, and only the corner of the blade 1 in the rotation advance direction is coated with the coating 20 of hard material.
  • the coating 20 of hard material is formed to have a very thin thickness of 10 to 20 ⁇ m (exaggerated in the figure for ease of seeing the coating 20 in the figure). Therefore, after molding the blade 1 as usual, it is sufficient to apply the coating 20 of hard material only to a portion of contact with the opposite member (that is, only the corner of the rotation advance direction or the surface of the rotation advance direction). Needless to say, the corner of the blade 1 is shaved by the thickness of the coating 20 of hard material by machine processing, and a casting mold taking into consideration beforehand the thickness of the coating 20 may be used to mold the blade 1 .
  • the coating of hard material may be formed entirely on the rotation advance direction surface and on the tip end surface.
  • the surface disposed opposite to the rotation advance direction surface does not have to be coated.
  • a discharge electrode 23 shaped so as to coat only the blade tip end of the blade surface on the back side and on the tip end surface is preferably used so that only the corner of the blade 1 in the rotation advance direction is subjected to the discharge coating.
  • the discharge electrode 23 has a substantially L-shaped section, and a shape curved along the back side of the blade as shown in FIG. 10 .
  • the electrode may be processed beforehand into a product shape.
  • the electrode may be formed in accordance with the product shape by discharge on the discharge condition in which the electrode is easily consumed. Under this condition, the electrode is set to have a minus polarity, and the discharge is caused on a comparatively small energy condition on which the pulse width is set to 1 ⁇ s or less, and the current value is 10 A or less. In this way, damage of the product is suppressed, and the electrode can accord with the product shape.
  • the electrode is assumed to have the minus polarity, and the discharge is caused under a comparatively large energy condition in which the pulse width is about 2 to 10 ⁇ s, and the current value is about 5 to 20 A.
  • such an electrode may be used to coat the corner of the chip fin 4 in the rotation advance direction.
  • the discharge In discharge coating, the discharge is caused on the surfaces disposed opposite to each other by application of a voltage between the blade 1 and the discharge electrode 23 submerged in dielectric liquid. Consequently, the surface of the discharge electrode 23 is molten by the discharge, and the molten element is attached on the surface of the blade 1 to form the alloy on the surface.
  • a solidified coating material is used for the material of the discharge electrode 23 .
  • discharge coating is a coating method optimum for coating precision components such as the blade 1 . Moreover, those places where the discharge does not occur are not coated. Therefore, because the portion to be coated can be coated locally, the pretreatments (such as masking) are unnecessary. Because heat generation is small, the blade is not thermally deformed, and consequently post-treatment is also unnecessary.
  • the coating range of the hard material is optimized, the yield of products can be enhanced. Because operation time can be shortened, and the coating material can be used without waste, the cost of production can be reduced. Furthermore, because the so-called discharge coating is used, only the corner of the rotation advance direction of the blade, or the surface of the rotation advance direction, is easily and inexpensively coated with the hard material.
  • FIG. 11 is a schematic diagram of a labyrinth seal structure according to an eighth embodiment of the rotating member of the present invention
  • FIG. 12 is a front view of the labyrinth seal of FIG. 11
  • FIG. 13 is a schematic diagram of a discharge processing machine according to the eighth embodiment of the coating method according to the present invention.
  • a labyrinth seal structure 31 is used in the gas turbine of a jet engine and inhibits a leak of combustion gas between an engine stationary component 33 and an engine rotating component 35 .
  • the labyrinth seal structure 31 includes, as constituting elements, a honeycomb-shaped stationary-side honeycomb seal component 37 integrally disposed on the engine stationary component 33 , and a rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 disposed inside the stationary-side honeycomb seal component 37 and capable of rotating integrally with the engine rotating component 35 .
  • a stationary-side abradable seal component whose inside is coated with the abradable coat, may also be used instead of the stationary-side honeycomb seal component 37 .
  • a concrete example of the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 which is an important part of an embodiment of the present invention, is as follows. Specifically, an annular seal component main body 41 , which is a main body of the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 , is integrally disposed on the engine rotating component 35 , and a plurality of annular seal fins 43 are integrally formed on the outer peripheral surface of the seal component main body 41 . Tip edges of the respective seal fins 43 are coated with coats 45 of the hard material. Furthermore, for forming each coat 45 of hard material, an electrode 47 for coating having consumability (see FIG. 13 ) is used, and a pulsed discharge is caused between the electrode 47 for coating and the tip edge of the seal fin 43 .
  • the constituting material of the electrode 47 for coating, or the reactant of the constituting material forms into the coating film containing the hard material on a plurality of treated portions in the tip edges of the seal fins 43 due to the discharge energy. Accordingly, a plurality of (four in the embodiment of the present invention) local coats 45 a of hard material are applied at equal intervals.
  • the phrase “the electrode for coating having consumability” means a green compact electrode (including a thermally treated green compact electrode) obtained by compression molding of a powdered metal (including a metal compound), a mixed material of the powdered metal and a powdered ceramic, or the powdered ceramic having conductivity.
  • the phrase “the electrode for coating having consumability” may also mean a silicon electrode formed of solid silicon. It is to be noted that ceramic having conductivity may be subjected to a surface treatment for forming a conductive coating film on the ceramic powder, and molded by compression, so that conductivity is secured.
  • examples of the “powdered metal” include Ti, Co, and the like
  • examples of the “powdered ceramic” include cBN, TiC, TiN, TiAlN, AlN, TiB 2 , WC, Cr 3 C 2 , SiC, ZrC, VC, B 4 C, Si 3 N 4 , ZrO 2 Y, Al 2 O 3 , and the like in accordance with the present invention.
  • the examples of the material that reacts by discharge energy to form the coating film containing hard material include Ti, W, Cr, Zr, Si, V, Mo, Nb. Furthermore, the electrode 47 for coating has a shape approximate to that of the portion to be treated in the tip edges of the seal fins 43 .
  • a bed 51 is used as the processing machine base, and a table 53 is disposed on the bed 51 .
  • the table 53 can be moved in X-axis directions (i.e., left and right directions shown in FIG. 13 ) by driving an X-axis servo motor (not shown), and can be moved in Y-axis directions i.e., front and back directions of a sheet surface of FIG. 13 ) by driving a Y-axis servo motor (not shown).
  • a support tool 59 to which the seal component main body 41 is fixed, is disposed on the support plate 57 .
  • a processing head 61 is disposed via a column (not shown) above the bed 51 (above in FIG. 13 ), and this processing head 61 can move in Z-axis directions (i.e., upward and downward shown directions in FIG. 13 ) by driving a Z-axis servo motor.
  • an electrode hold member 63 for holding the electrode 47 for coating is disposed on the processing head 61 .
  • the electrode hold member 63 and the support tool 59 are electrically connected to a power supply 65 . Therefore, the seal component main body 41 is fixed by the support tool 59 in a state in which a portion of the tip edge of the seal fin 43 to be treated in the peripheral direction is directed right upwards in the processing tank 55 .
  • the table 53 is moved in the X-axis and Y-axis directions (at least either one of these directions) by driving the X-axis and Y-axis servo motors. In this way, the position of the seal fin 43 is determined such that the portion of the tip end of the seal fin 43 to be treated faces the electrode 47 for coating.
  • the electrode 47 for coating is moved integrally with the processing head 61 in the Z-axis direction by driving the Z-axis servo motor, while a pulsed voltage is generated between the electrode 47 for coating and the portion of the tip end of the tip fin 43 to be treated in the dielectric liquid L. Accordingly, the electrode material of the electrode 47 for coating is locally diffused in, and/or welded to, the portion of the tip edge of the seal fin 43 to be treated by discharge energy, and the portion of the tip edge of one seal fin 43 to be treated can locally be coated with a local coat 45 a of hard material.
  • the position of another seal fin 43 is determined such that the portion of the tip fin of the seal fin 43 to be treated faces the electrode 47 for coating. Then, as described above, the electrode material of the electrode for coating 47 is locally diffused in, and/or welded to, the portion of the tip edge of this seal fin 43 to be treated by discharge energy, and the portion of the tip edge of the seal fin 43 to be treated is locally coated with the local coat 45 a of hard material.
  • the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 includes the coat 45 of hard material. Therefore, by integrally rotating the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 and the engine rotating component 35 , even when the engine stationary component is deformed and the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 contacts with the stationary-side honeycomb seal component 37 , the stationary-side honeycomb seal component 37 is only shaved by the coat 45 of hard material in the rotating labyrinth seal component 39 .
  • the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 is substantially hardly shaved at all.
  • the clearance between the stationary-side honeycomb seal component 37 and the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 is inhibited from increasing during rotation of the engine rotating component 35 , and the seal effect of the labyrinth seal structure 31 can be kept in an appropriate state (i.e., optimized).
  • the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 is set beforehand so as to slightly contact the stationary-side honeycomb seal component 37 at the time of the initial rotation of the engine rotating component 35 . Accordingly, the clearance between the stationary-side honeycomb seal component 37 and the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 can be set to be as small as possible during, and after, the initial rotation and the seal effect of the labyrinth seal structure 31 can further be enhanced.
  • coating of the coats 45 of hard material is performed on portions of the tip edges of the seal fins 43 by diffusing and/or welding electrode material of the electrode 47 for coating by discharge energy generated between the electrode for coating 47 and the portion of the tip edge of the seal fin 43 , which is performed without performing plating or thermal spraying. Therefore, during production of the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 , the coating post-treatments (such as the blast treatment and the process of removing masking tape) are unnecessary.
  • the boundary portion between the coat 45 of hard material formed by discharge energy and the mother body of the seal fin 43 has alloy composition changing properties, and the coat of hard material can be firmly connected to the tip edge of the seal fin 43 .
  • the coat 45 of hard material includes a plurality of local coats 45 a of hard material.
  • the electrode material 47 of the electrode for coating is locally diffused in, and/or welded to, a plurality of portions to be treated along the peripheral direction in the tip edge of the seal fin 43 , but not along the whole periphery of the tip edge of the seal fin 43 .
  • the electrode 47 for coating can be formed to have a small and simple shape in accordance with the size and/or the shape of the portion of the tip edge of the seal fin 43 to be treated. Accordingly, the amount of the electrode material used to form the electrode 47 for coating can be reduced.
  • the coat 45 of hard material i.e., local coat 45 a of hard material
  • the coat 45 of hard material can be connected firmly to the tip edge of the seal fin 43 . Therefore, even when the entire tip edge periphery of the seal fin 43 is not coated with the coat 45 of hard material, sufficient abrasive properties of the entire rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 can be achieved by the plurality of local coats 45 a of hard material.
  • the coating pretreatments such as the blast process and the process of attaching the masking tape
  • the coating post-treatments such as the process of removing the masking tape
  • the coat 45 of hard material can be connected firmly to the tip edge of the seal fin 43 , the coat 45 of hard material does not easily peel off from the tip edge of the seal fin 43 , and the quality level of the rotating labyrinth seal component 39 is stabilized.
  • the entire rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 has sufficient abrasive properties, and the electrode 47 for coating can be formed to have a small and simple shape in accordance with the size/shape of the portion to be treated of the tip edge in the seal fin 43 . Moreover, the amount of the electrode material used to form the electrode for coating 47 can be reduced. Therefore, the production cost of the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 can be reduced.
  • the present invention is not limited to the description of the embodiments of the present invention.
  • the discharge can be performed in an electrically insulating gas.
  • various modifications can be carried out within the scope of the present invention.
  • the coating pretreatments such as the blast process and the process of attaching masking tape
  • the coating post-treatments such as the process of removing the masking tape
  • the entire rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component has sufficient abrasive properties, and the electrode for coating can be formed to have a small and simple shape in accordance with the size/shape of the portion to be treated at the tip edge in the seal fin. Moreover, the amount of electrode material used to form the electrode for coating can be reduced. Therefore, the production cost for the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component can be reduced.
  • the method for forming the electrode is not limited to the compression molding as long as the electrode is formed by using powder.
  • a method for forming the electrode there are a method that uses slip, a method that uses an MIM (Metal Injection Molding), a method that uses thermal spraying, a method that uses nano powder accompanying a jet stream, and the like.
  • MIM Metal Injection Molding
  • a method that uses thermal spraying a method that uses nano powder accompanying a jet stream, and the like.
  • powder is dispersed in a solvent, and the solution is put in a porous mold such as gypsum to remove the solvent so that the electrode can be molded.
  • a mixture of powder and binder is kneaded, and then injected into a heated mold.
  • heated powder is sprayed to combine a part of the sprayed powder, forming the electrode.

Abstract

A pulsed discharge is generated between tip ends of a rotating member such as a blade and a discharge electrode including a hard material such as cBN in dielectric liquid or gas by a power supply for discharge to melt the discharge electrode, and a part of the discharge electrode is attached to the tip end of the rotating member to form an abrasive coating film including the hard materials such as cBN.

Description

  • This application is a Divisional Application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/976,215, which is a Continuation-in-Part of International Application No. PCT/JP03/12945, filed Oct. 9, 2003, which claims priority on Japanese Patent Application No. 295964/2002, filed Oct. 9, 2002, and Japanese Patent Application No. 295966/2002, filed Oct. 9, 2002, and Japanese Patent Application No. 167075/2003, filed Jun. 11, 2003. The entire disclosures of the above patent applications are hereby incorporated by reference.
  • BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • 1. Technical Field of the Invention
  • The present invention relates to a rotating/rotatable member such as a blade or labyrinth seal for use in a gas turbine, steam turbine, compressor or the like, and a method for coating the rotating/rotatable member. More particularly, it relates to a rotating/rotatable member on a part of which a coating film including a hard material is formed, and a method for coating the rotating/rotatable member.
  • 2. Description of the Related Art
  • For a rotating/rotatable member such as a blade or a labyrinth seal, a clearance between a rotating section and a stationary section, such as a chip clearance between the blade and a casing or a shroud, or a seal clearance between the labyrinth seal and a honeycomb seal, needs to be kept/set to be appropriate during operation of a gas turbine. When the clearance is set to be excessively large to avoid, efficiency of the gas turbine drops. Conversely, when the clearance is set to be excessively small, a tip end of the rotating member breaks and causes trouble for the gas turbine.
  • Therefore, in consideration of contact of the rotating member with surrounding members (casing, shroud, honeycomb seal, and the like), a tip end of a blade or of a labyrinth seal is coated with an abrasive coating of a relatively hard material for chipping off the material of a contact surface of the surrounding member. The surrounding member is coated with an abradable coating of a material, which is relatively easily chipped. Accordingly, chip clearance or seal clearance is adjusted so as to be minimized so that a side of the surrounding member is chipped off by the tip end of the rotating member when driving the gas turbine thereby taking advantage of a hardness difference of the coatings.
  • In this case, FIG. 1A is a perspective view of a usual turbine blade, FIG. 1B is a perspective view of the turbine blade with a chip shroud, and FIG. 1C is a perspective view of a compressor blade. It is to be noted that a platform or a dovetail on a turbine disk side is omitted from these figures. In a turbine blade 1, shown in FIG. 1A, the whole surface of a blade tip end is coated with an abrasive coating 5 a. In a turbine blade 2 provided with a chip shroud 3, shown in FIG. 1B, the whole surfaces of the tip ends of chip fins 4 disposed on a chip shroud 3 (i.e., the tip ends of the turbine blade) are coated with abrasive coatings 5 b. Furthermore, for the blade 1 of the compressor, shown in FIG. 1C, an abrasive coating 5 c is applied over the region of the blade tip end (including the backside of the figure).
  • Moreover, FIG. 2 is a sectional view showing one example of a labyrinth seal tip end. The labyrinth seal is disposed in the clearance between a rotating section and a stationary section to prevent leakage of air or combustion gas, and is a seal structure frequently used in a gas turbine and compressor. In general, an annular labyrinth seal 6 including concave/convex portion is disposed on a rotating section side, and a honeycomb seal (not shown) including a structure easy to be chipped off is disposed on a stationary section side. FIG. 2 illustrates a sectional view cut in a plane including a center axis of the labyrinth seal 6, and an abrasive coating 5 d is applied to the tip end of the convex portion of the labyrinth seal 6.
  • These abrasive coatings have heretofore been applied by methods such as welding, thermal spraying, and plating (e.g., see References 1 and 2). With respect to coating by welding, a welding rod or a powder body is used to coat predetermined portions, such as the tip end of the turbine blade or the labyrinth seal. With respect to coating by thermal spraying, zirconia is thermally sprayed, which has a small difference in thermal expansion from a mother material and whose hardness is relatively high (Vickers hardness of 1300 HV). With respect to coating by plating, abrasive grains (Vickers hardness of 4500 HV) of cubic boron nitride (cBN), which are high in hardness, are electrically attached by nickel plating.
  • It is to be noted that other prior art methods related to the present invention are described in References 3, 4.
  • [Reference 1]
  • Japanese Laid-Open Patent Publication No. 11-286768.
  • [Reference 2]
  • Japanese Laid-Open Patent Publication No. 2000-345809.
  • [Reference 3]
  • Japanese Laid-Open Patent Publication No. 7-301103.
  • [Reference 4]
  • Japanese Laid-Open Patent Publication No. 8-319804.
  • However, in the above-described methods, a portion that does not have to be coated is masked in order to closely attach the abrasive coating, and the surface to be coated needs to be blast-treated in order to enhance adhesion, and there are problems in that there many pretreatments are required and costs are high. In either conventional thermal spraying or plating methods, there have been problems in that the adhesion of the coating is bad, peeling occurs at the time of driving the apparatus, engine trouble is caused, and additionally the chip clearance or the seal clearance is not maintained appropriately. Furthermore, there is a problem in that, with respect to coating by welding, only a metal much lower in hardness can be coated as compared to when a ceramic is used, and, therefore, abrasive properties (which are properties for chipping off a material to be ground) are inferior. Moreover, there is a problem in that the quality level of the coating fluctuates based on the operator's expertise, and a welding crack may easily occur when employing a material poor in thermal conductivity and having small elongation properties. Furthermore, there has been a problem encountered in that post-treatments are required, such as processing grinding to a required dimension after welding so that a lot of trouble is required.
  • Moreover, according to References 3 and 4, in the coating method, discharge is performed between the rotating member and an electrode on first discharge conditions so that the electrode is consumed, and the electrode is formed in accordance with the shape of a coating film forming portion. Thereafter, the coating film is formed by discharge between the electrode and the rotating member on second discharge conditions. Then, even when the electrode is not processed beforehand for a product shape, a coating object portion can still be appropriately coated. On the first discharge conditions for consuming the electrode, the electrode is set to have a minus polarity, a pulse width is set to 1 μs or less, and a current value is set to 10 A or less. On the second discharge conditions for forming the coating film, the electrode is preferably set to have minus polarity, the pulse width is set to be 2 to 10 μs, and the current value is set to be 5 to 20 A.
  • Moreover, in accordance with conventional abrasive coating, because the whole area of the tip end of the blade is coated, there has been a problem encountered in that the coating range is broad and the yield of products is poor.
  • Furthermore, heretofore, coating has been performed by plating or by thermal spraying. Therefore, during production (manufacturing) of the labyrinth seal, coating pretreatments, such as a blast process and a process of attaching a masking tape, are required before coating is performed, and coating post-treatments, such as a process of removing the masking tape, are required after coating is performed. Therefore, the operation time required for the production (manufacturing) of the labyrinth seal lengthens, and, therefore, it is not easy to improve productivity of the labyrinth seal.
  • Additionally, for the same reason, the abrasive coat cannot be firmly attached to the tip edge of a seal fin. Therefore, a problem has been encountered in that the abrasive coat easily peels off the tip edge of the seal fin and the quality of the labyrinth seal is not stable.
  • SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • The present invention has been developed to solve the above-described various problems. In particular, a first object of the present invention is to provide a rotating/rotatable member that does not require any pretreatment or post-treatment, and which has good adhesion, and which is coated with a precise abrasive coating of a relatively hard material (hereinafter, referred to as a “hard material” in the present specification for the sake of convenience) compared to the material of an opponent component that contacts with the rotating/rotatable member during rotation. In accordance with the first object of the present invention, a method for coating the rotating/rotatable member is also provided. Moreover, the first object of the invention is also to provide a method for forming a long-service-life coating in tests of high cycle fatigue (HCF) or low cycle fatigue (LCF) for an abrasive coated component.
  • Furthermore, a second object of the present invention is to provide a rotating/rotatable member wherein the area of coating of the hard material is optimized to enhance the yield and to provide a method for coating the rotating member in accordance with the second object of the present invention.
  • Additionally, a third object of the present invention is to provide a rotating/rotatable member in which the operation time required for production of a labyrinth seal is reduced and in which productivity of labyrinth components can be improved. In accordance with the third object of the present invention, a method for coating the rotating/rotatable member is provided.
  • To achieve the first object, according to a first invention, there is provided a method for coating a rotating/rotatable member, comprising the steps of: generating a pulsed discharge between a rotating/rotatable member formed into a predetermined shape and a discharge electrode of a green compact in dielectric liquid or gas to transfer a hard material of the discharge electrode or a hard material changed from a material of the discharge electrode onto the rotating/rotatable member by each discharge pulse so that a hard concavity and convexity is formed on the rotating/rotatable member, wherein the green compact includes the hard material or the material changing into the hard material by the discharge; and repeatedly generating the discharge pulse to form on the rotating/rotatable member a hard coating film having concavity and convexity.
  • Moreover, according to a second invention, in the method for coating the rotating/rotatable member, the hard coating film is an abrasive coating film that is formed on a part of the rotating/rotatable member and that rubs against and shaves an opponent component.
  • According to the first and second inventions, because the so-called “discharge coating method” is used, pretreatments such as masking and blast treatment or post-treatments such as grinding are not necessary. Furthermore, the coating film or a layer having good adhesion can be formed and used as a coating, and the coating film contains remarkably hard materials such as a cubic boron nitride (cBN), and a hard coating film and a coating film having good abrasive properties can be formed. Abrasive properties of the coating are improved by treatment on a condition for forming a coating having a coarse surface.
  • Moreover, according to a third invention, the method comprises the steps of: generating a discharge between the rotating/rotatable member and the discharge electrode on a first discharge condition on which the discharge electrode is consumed so that the shape of the discharge electrode is made to conform to the shape of the coating film forming portion on the rotating/rotatable member; and, thereafter generating a discharge between the discharge electrode and the rotating/rotatable member on a second discharge condition to form the coating film on the rotating/rotatable member.
  • Furthermore, according to a fourth invention, preferably, on the first discharge condition, the discharge electrode has a minus polarity, a pulse width of 1 μs or less, and a current value of 10 A or less, and on the second discharge condition, the discharge electrode has a minus polarity, the pulse width is 2 to 10 μs, and the current value is 5 to 20 A. Additionally, the coating film is preferably formed on the tip end of the rotating/rotatable member. Furthermore, for the hard member, as in an eighth invention, the discharge electrode of the green compact contains one of, or a mixture, of cBN, TiC, TiN, TiAlN, TiB2, WC, Cr3C2, SiC, ZrC, VC, B4C, Si3N4, ZrO2—Y, and Al2O3. Moreover, the material forming the hard member by the discharge is preferably one of, or a mixture of, Ti, Cr, W, V, Zr, Si, Mo, and Nb, and these materials are formed into carbide by the discharge in an oil in order to form a hard coating film. Because a so-called “discharge coating method” is used according to this method, the tip end of the rotating/rotatable member can easily be coated with the hard material. From the viewpoint of resistance to oxidation, a coating film containing TiC, WC, or cBN is preferably formed on the rotating/rotatable member that is driven at a low temperature, and a coating film containing cBN or Cr3C2 is used in the rotating member that is driven at a high temperature, and a coating film containing ZrO2—Y or Al2O3 is formed on the rotating/rotatable member that is driven at an even further higher temperature.
  • According to a fifth, sixth, seventh, and ninth inventions, there is provided a method of enhancing fatigue strength of a coated surface. A coating film that does not easily stretch, as compared with a mother material, is formed on the surface. Then, because a thin coating film bears a tensile load, the coating film on the surface cracks easily. When coating by a discharge surface treatment, because the hard layer is firmly welded to the mother material, cracking of the coating film develops into that of the mother material. To avoid this cracking, it is necessary to form a coating film having ductility, or to form a layer for preventing the development of cracks between the mother material and the coating film, or to form a coating layer that is strong against pull forces.
  • In accordance with a fifth invention, in the coating film, a ratio of a coated area coated with the hard material in a coating film forming portion to a portion not coated with the hard material in the coating film forming portion is such that coverage is suppressed, wherein the not coated providing ductility is scattered and left in the coated area (FIG. 4), and thereby ductility is provided for the coating film.
  • In a sixth invention, the discharge electrode is made to contain a metal that does not easily form carbide. Accordingly, a portion of the metal that does not easily form carbide is scattered in the coating film and has ductility, and by forming a portion between the hard materials ductility is provided to the coating film.
  • In accordance with a seventh invention, a porous coating film, mainly formed of a metal, is formed as a base. Thereafter, since the coating film containing the hard material is formed on the porous coating film, cracking of the coating layer is prevented from developing into cracking into the mother material.
  • In accordance with a ninth invention, the surface of the coating layer is peened, and residual stress of compression persists after peening. Thus, even when the mother material stretches, tensile stress is reduced.
  • These fifth to seventh, and ninth inventions are effective not only for forming a coating with hard material but also for the discharge surface treatment for forming the coating film on the surface, such as when forming a wear-resistant coating.
  • Moreover, according to the eighth invention, because a remarkably hard ceramic, usable in the coating of the hard material, is provided, it is possible to provide a coating formed of an effective hard material.
  • Furthermore, according to a tenth invention, a rotating/rotatable member is provided having an abrasive coating film formed on a part thereof that is formed by a pulsed discharge between the rotating/rotatable member and a discharge electrode of a green compact in dielectric liquid or gas, wherein the green compact includes a hard material or a material that changes into a hard material by the discharge, and the abrasive coating film includes the hard material of the green compact or the hard material that is changed from the material of the green compact by the discharge. The rotating/rotatable member is characterized in that the pretreatments, such as a masking or a blast process, or the post-treatments, such as grinding, are not necessary and the coating film or the layer having good adhesion is formed. Furthermore, the coating film is preferably formed on the tip end of the rotating/rotatable member.
  • For the rotating/rotatable member, the discharge is caused between the rotating/rotatable member and the discharge electrode in the dielectric liquid or gas to form an abrasive coating film, including hard material, on a part of the rotating/rotatable member so that the rotating/rotatable member is formed to be superior in abrasive properties.
  • According to the eleventh to fourteenth inventions, because the coating film having ductility is formed, the layer for preventing development of cracks is formed between the mother material and the coating film, and the coating layer, which is strong against pull forces, is formed so that the rotating member is provided with high fatigue strength.
  • Moreover, according to a fifteenth invention, a remarkably hard ceramic, usable in the coating of the hard material, is provided and, accordingly, the rotating/rotatable member is provided with good abrasive properties.
  • To achieve the second object, according to a 16th invention, there is provided a rotating/rotatable member wherein only the vicinity of a portion of the rotating/rotatable member that has a possibility of coming into contact with a component disposed opposite to the rotating/rotatable member is coated with hard material. Accordingly, a rotating/rotatable member is obtained that requires little in labor of operation, is small in the amount of electrode use, exhibits a good yield of products, and that is low in cost.
  • In accordance with a 17th invention, there is provided a further inexpensive rotating/rotatable member wherein the range of area to be coated is locally limited.
  • In accordance with an 18th invention, a rotating/rotatable member is provided that is coated in a method for enhancing the abrasive properties of the tenth to 17th inventions. The rotating/rotatable member is coated under conditions for forming a coarse surface roughness in order to enhance the abrasive properties of the coated rotating member.
  • A 19th invention provides a concrete example of the 16th invention, wherein there is provided a blade whose tip end is coated with hard material. Only a corner of the blade in a rotation advance direction and a portion in the vicinity of the corner are coated with the hard material.
  • Because the range of the coating of the hard material is optimized, the yield is improved, the operation time is shortened, and the coating material can be coated efficiently without waste.
  • A 20th invention provides a concrete example of the 17th invention, wherein a rotating/rotatable member is provided in which the coating film is formed on not all, but some of the blades of a rotor or a blisk. By minimizing the number of coated blades, the operation time is reduced and coating material can be coated even more efficiently with even less waste.
  • To achieve a third object, in accordance with a 21st invention, the rotating/rotatable member is a rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component that is one of the structure elements of a labyrinth seal structure that suppresses leak of a gas or liquid between a stationary component and a rotating component. The rotating/rotatable member comprises an annular seal component main body, and an annular seal fin integrally formed on an outer peripheral surface of the seal component main body, and a tip edge of the seal fin is coated with hard material. For forming a coat of the hard material, an electrode for coating having consumability is used, a pulsed discharge is caused between the electrode for coating and the tip edge of the seal fin in dielectric liquid or gas, and the coat includes the hard material formed of a constituting material of the electrode for coating formed on the tip edge of the seal fin by discharge energy or of a reactant of the constituting material.
  • In this disclosure, in general, the phrase “electrode for coating having consumability” means a green compact electrode (including a thermally treated green compact electrode) obtained by compression molding of a powdered metal (including a metal compound), a mixed material of the powdered metal and a powdered ceramic, or a powdered ceramic having conductivity. Furthermore, the phrase “electrode for coating having consumability” also means a silicon electrode formed of solid silicon. It is to be noted that, in accordance with the present invention, the ceramic having conductivity is appropriately subjected to a surface treatment.
  • According to a 21st invention, the coat of hard material is a coating film including a hard material constituted of the constituting material of the electrode for coating, or a reactant of the constituting material, formed on the tip edge of the seal fin by discharge energy generated between the electrode for coating and the tip edge of the seal fin without performing plating or thermal spraying. Therefore, during production of the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component, coating pretreatments, such as a blast treatment and a process of attaching a masking tape, and coating post-treatments, such as a process of removing the masking tape, are unnecessary. Moreover, because a boundary portion between the coat of the hard material coated by discharge energy and a mother body of the seal fin has alloy composition changing properties (i.e., alloy composition changes depending on the position), the coat of hard material can be firmly connected to the tip edge of the seal fin.
  • Furthermore, in accordance with the 21st invention, preferably as in the 22nd invention, the coat of hard material includes a plurality of local coating films locally formed on a plurality of portions in a peripheral direction to the tip edge of the seal fin. By this constitution, the coat of hard material includes a plurality of local coats. In other words, the coating film including hard material constituted of the constituting material of the electrode for coating, or the reactant of the constituting material, is locally formed on a plurality of portions of the peripheral direction in the tip edge of the seal fin, but not in the whole periphery of the tip edge of the seal fin. Therefore, the electrode for coating can be formed in a small and simple shape in accordance with the size or the shape of the portion to be treated of the tip edge of the seal fin. Moreover, the amount of electrode material used from the electrode for coating can be reduced.
  • It is to be noted that, as described above, because the coat of hard material (i.e., the local coat of hard material) can be connected firmly to the tip edge of the seal fin, the entire rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component can be provided with sufficient abrasive properties by just the local coat of the plurality of hard materials without having to coat the whole periphery of the tip edge of the seal fin with hard material.
  • Furthermore, in accordance with the tenth invention, preferably as in the 15th invention, the electrode for coating is the green compact electrode obtained by compression molding of powdered metal, the mixed material of the powdered metal and the powdered ceramic, or the powdered ceramic having conductivity, or the solid silicon electrode. Furthermore, the ceramic is one of, or a mixture of, cBN, Cr3C2, TiC, TiN, TiAlN, TiB2, ZrO2—Y, ZrC, VC, B4C, WC, SiC, Si3N4, and Al2O3.
  • In accordance with this disclosure, the “powdered metal” also includes a powdered metal compound. It is to be noted that, in accordance with the present invention, a ceramic that does not have conductivity may be appropriately subjected to a surface treatment so as to secure conductivity.
  • Moreover, in accordance with a 23rd invention, there is provided a labyrinth seal structure that suppresses a leakage of a gas or liquid between a stationary component and a rotating component, comprising: a stationary-side seal component integrally disposed on the stationary component; an annular seal component main body that is disposed inside the stationary-side seal component and that is capable of rotating integrally with the rotating/rotatable component and which is integrally disposed on the rotating/rotatable component; an annular seal fin integrally formed on an outer peripheral surface of the seal component main body; and a hard coat formed on the tip edge of the seal fin, wherein the hard coat is a coating film including a hard material constituted of a constituting material, or a reactant of the constituting material, of an electrode for coating formed on the tip edge of the seal fin by discharge energy of a pulsed discharge between the electrode for coating and the tip edge of the seal fin, and the electrode for coating has consumability.
  • In this disclosure, the phrase “stationary-side seal component” includes a honeycomb-shaped stationary honeycomb seal component, or a stationary abradable seal component whose inside is coated with an abradable coat. Moreover, in general, the phrase “electrode for coating having consumability” means a green compact electrode (including a thermally treated green compact electrode) obtained by compression molding of a powdered metal (including a metal compound), a mixed material of a powdered metal and a powdered ceramic, or a powdered ceramic having conductivity. Furthermore, the phrase “electrode for coating having consumability” also means a silicon electrode formed of solid silicon. It is to be noted that for ceramic that does not have conductivity, the surface of a ceramic powder that does not have conductivity is then subjected to a treatment for forming a conductive coating film so as to appropriately secure conductivity for the ceramic powder.
  • According to the 23rd invention, the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component includes a coat of hard material. Therefore, when integrally rotating the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component with the rotating/rotatable component, even when the stationary-side seal component is deformed, when the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component contacts the stationary-side seal component, the stationary-side seal component is simply shaved by the coat of hard material in the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component, whereas the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component is hardly shaved at all.
  • Accordingly, the clearance between the stationary-side seal and the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component is inhibited from increasing during rotation of the rotating/rotatable component, and the seal effect of the labyrinth seal structure can be kept in an appropriate state. Moreover, the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component is set so as to slightly contact with the stationary-side seal component during initial rotation of the rotating/rotatable component. Accordingly, during or after the initial rotation, the clearance between the stationary-side seal component and the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component can be reduced as much as possible, and the seal effect of the labyrinth seal structure can be further enhanced.
  • Moreover, the coat of hard material is the coating film, including the hard material constituted of the constituting material of the electrode for coating of or the reactant of the constituting material, that is formed on the tip edge of the seal fin by discharge energy generated between the electrode for coating and the tip edge of the seal fin without performing plating or thermal spraying. Therefore, during production of the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component, the coating pretreatments, such as the blast treatment and the process of attaching the masking tape, and the coating post-treatments, such as the process of removing the masking tape are, unnecessary. Furthermore, because the boundary portion between the coat of hard material coated by discharge energy and the mother material of the seal fin has alloy composition changing properties, the coat of hard material can be connected firmly to the tip edge of the seal fin.
  • Furthermore, in accordance with a 24th invention, preferably the coat of hard material includes a plurality of local coating films locally formed on a plurality of portions in the peripheral direction of the tip edge of the seal fin. By this constitution, the coat of hard material includes a plurality of local coats of hard material. In other words, the coating film, which includes hard material constituted of the constituting material of the electrode for coating or the reactant of the constituting material, is formed locally on a plurality of portions to be treated in the peripheral direction of the tip edge of the seal fin, and not in the whole periphery of the tip edge of the seal fin. Therefore, the electrode for coating can be formed into a small and simple shape in accordance with the size or shape of the portion to be treated in the tip edge of the seal fin. Moreover, the amount of the electrode material used by the electrode for coating can be reduced.
  • It is to be noted that, as described above, because the coat of the hard material (i.e., local coat of hard material) can be firmly connected to the tip edge of the seal fin, the entire rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal components can be provided with sufficient abrasive properties by local coats of the plurality of hard materials without coating the whole periphery of the tip edge of the seal fin with hard material.
  • In accordance with a 25th invention, there is provided a method for manufacturing a rotating/rotatable member of a blade or a labyrinth member, comprising: a first step of forming a forged material or a casted material into a predetermined shape by mechanical processing; and a second step of generating a pulsed discharge between a rotating/rotatable member formed into a predetermined shape and a discharge electrode of a green compact or solid silicon in dielectric liquid or gas in order to transfer hard material of the discharge electrode or hard material changed from a material of the discharge electrode onto the rotating/rotatable member by each discharge pulse so that a hard concavity and convexity is formed on the rotating/rotatable member, wherein the green compact includes the hard material or the material changing into the hard material by the discharge, and repeatedly generating the discharge pulse to form on the rotating/rotatable member a hard coating film having the concavity and convexity.
  • In accordance with a 26th invention, in the above-described manufacturing method, in the second step, an abrasive coating film, which rubs against and shaves an opponent component, is formed as the hard coating film on a part of the rotating/rotatable member.
  • In accordance with a 27th invention, there is provided a method for manufacturing the rotating/rotatable member, wherein the second step comprises the steps of forming a discharge electrode into a shape in accordance with the shape of a predetermined portion of the rotating/rotatable member.
  • In accordance with a 28th invention, there is provided a method for providing discharge conditions so that the shape of the discharge electrode conforms to that of the coating film forming portion of the rotating/rotatable member in order to form the electrode without any trouble.
  • In accordance with a 29th invention, there is provided a method for manufacturing the rotating/rotatable member so that the rotating/rotatable member does not easily collapse from fatigue, wherein during the formation of the coating film in the second step, a discharge condition is controlled to set a coverage to be 95% or less in the coating film forming portion, wherein the coverage is a ratio of an area at which the coating film including the hard material is formed.
  • In accordance with a 30th invention, there is provided a method of manufacturing the rotating/rotatable member, wherein the ratio of the coverage is controlled to provide the rotating/rotatable member with the characteristic does not easily collapse from fatigue.
  • In accordance with a 31st invention, there is provided a method for manufacturing the rotating/rotatable member so that the rotating/rotatable member does not easily collapse from fatigue, wherein in the second step, a green compact electrode containing 5% or more by volume of a metal that does not easily react into carbide is used to perform the discharge.
  • In accordance with a 32nd invention, there is provided a method for manufacturing the rotating/rotatable member so that the rotating/rotatable member does not easily collapse from fatigue, wherein the second step comprises the steps of: forming a porous coating film on a coating film forming portion of the rotating/rotatable member; and thereafter forming the coating film including the hard material on the porous coating film. In accordance with a 33rd invention, there is provided a method for manufacturing the rotating/rotatable member superior in abrasive properties by using the appropriate discharge electrode material of the green compact in the second step.
  • In accordance with a 34th invention, there is provided a method of manufacturing the rotating/rotatable member so that the rotating/rotatable member does not easily collapse from fatigue, further comprising: a third step of subjecting the coating film formed in the second step to a peening treatment.
  • Other objects and advantageous characteristics of the present invention will be apparent from the following description with reference to the accompanying drawings.
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • FIG. 1A is a perspective view of a typical turbine blade, FIG. 1B is a perspective view of the turbine blade provided with a chip shroud, and FIG. 1C is a perspective view of a compressor blade;
  • FIG. 2 is a perspective view showing one example of a conventional labyrinth seal tip end;
  • FIG. 3 is a diagram showing a first embodiment of a rotating/rotatable member and coating method of the present invention;
  • FIG. 4 is a diagram showing a second embodiment of the rotating/rotatable member and coating method of the present invention;
  • FIG. 5 is a diagram showing a third embodiment of the rotating/rotatable member and coating method of the present invention;
  • FIG. 6 is a diagram showing a fourth embodiment of the rotating/rotatable member and coating method of the present invention;
  • FIGS. 7A, 7B, and 7C are perspective views of the turbine blade according to a fifth embodiment of the rotating/rotatable member of the present invention;
  • FIGS. 8A, 8B, and 8C are perspective views of the turbine blade provided with a chip shroud according to a sixth embodiment of the rotating/rotatable member of the present invention;
  • FIGS. 9A, and 9B, are perspective views of the compressor blade according to a seventh embodiment of the rotating/rotatable member of the present invention;
  • FIG. 10 is a diagram showing the fifth embodiment of the coating method according to the present invention;
  • FIG. 11 is a schematic diagram of a labyrinth seal structure according to an eighth embodiment of the rotating/rotatable member of the present invention;
  • FIG. 12 is a front view of a labyrinth seal of FIG. 11; and
  • FIG. 13 is a schematic diagram of a discharge processing machine according to the eighth embodiment of the coating method according to the present invention.
  • DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
  • Preferable embodiments of the present invention will hereinafter be described with reference to the drawings. It is to be noted that components common to the respective drawings are denoted with the same reference numerals, and redundant description is omitted.
  • FIG. 3 is a diagram showing a first embodiment of a rotating/rotatable member and coating method of the present invention. This figure shows that the tip end of blade 1, for use in a gas turbine or a compressor, is coated with a hard material.
  • In the method of the present invention, as shown in FIG. 3, the blade 1 and a discharge electrode 11 that includes cubic boron nitride (cBN) are submerged in a processing tank 12 filled with dielectric liquid (oil). A pulsed discharge is caused between the tip end of the blade 1 and the discharge electrode 11 by a power supply for discharge 14 in order to melt the discharge electrode 11. A part of the electrode is consequently welded to the tip end of the blade 1 to form a cBN-containing coating film 10. In this case, only sections of the blade 1 and discharge electrode 11 are shown, however, the blade 1 is fixed by a blade fixing jig, and the discharge electrode 11 is fixed by an electrode fixing jig (not shown). It is to be noted that FIG. 3 shows an example of the blade, but a labyrinth seal, which is the same kind of rotating/rotatable member, can also be coated with hard material in accordance with a similar method. It is to be noted that, in the figure, reference numeral 13 denotes the blade fixing jig.
  • In accordance with the above description, cBN is used as a hard material, and cBN is a coating material optimum for a turbine blade that is exposed at a high temperature in that Vickers hardness is 4500 HV at room temperature, and Vickers hardness close to 2000 HV can be maintained even at high temperature of 900° C. or more. Additionally, from the viewpoint of resistance to oxidation, a hard material of TiC, WC can be used in those rotating members used at a low temperature, Cr3C2 can be used in those rotating members for use at a high temperature, and ZrO2—Y or Al2O3 can be used in those rotating/rotatable members for use at an even further high temperature. Therefore, according to the present invention, a coating film containing TiC, WC, or cBN is formed on the rotating/rotatable member for use at low temperature, a coating film containing cBN or Cr3C2 is used in rotating/rotatable members for use at high temperature, and a coating film containing ZrO2—Y or Al2O3 is formed on the rotating/rotatable member for use at even further high temperature. Needless to say, these hard materials may also be mixed together to form an optimum coating film. It is to be noted that a discharge coating technique is disclosed, for example, in “Surface Treatment Method of Metal Material by In-liquid Discharge” of Japanese Laid-Open Patent Publication No. 7-197275, and the description provided therein is omitted.
  • In accordance with the present invention, because ceramics, such as cBN are hard insulating materials, a single ceramic such as cBN cannot be formed into the discharge electrode, but the discharge electrode containing such ceramics (such as cBN) can be formed by use of a conductive binder. For example, Co-based alloy powder can be used as the conductive binder, and ceramic powder such as cBN may be mixed with the Co-based alloy powder, charged in a press mold, and compressed/molded. It is to be noted that the amount of binder is preferably about 50% or more by a volume ratio of the mixture.
  • Furthermore, a powder of ceramics, such as cBN, may be coated with titanium (Ti), nickel (Ni), or cobalt (Co), which is a binder used to form the discharge electrode. A particle diameter of the whole powder needs to be smaller than the pole distance between the electrode and the work undergoing the discharge surface treatment, and is, therefore, preferably about 10 μm or less. The powder of ceramics, such as cBN, can be easily coated with a thin coating film of Ti, Ni, or Co metal by vapor deposition.
  • When the conductive binder is mixed, and the discharge electrode containing ceramics, such as cBN, is formed in this manner, a discharge can be caused in a portion of the binder so that the discharge electrode is brought into a molten state by heat energy, and a part of the discharge electrode can then be welded/attached to the tip end of the rotating member, such as the blade. As a result, the tip end of the rotating/rotatable member can be coated with a hard coating film containing ceramics such as cBN.
  • Here, Table 1 shows results of a wear test in which two test pieces (upper and lower test pieces), wherein only the lower test piece is coated by the coating method of the present invention, are ground (rubbed) with each other at high temperature.
  • TABLE 1
    Coating material Wear amount (μm)
    Upper test piece Ni alloy 600 or more
    Lower test piece cBN coating 0
  • The upper test piece is RENE77, which is a nickel-based alloy, and the lower test piece is cBN, which is the coating film made in accordance with the present invention. For test conditions, the conditions employed were temperature: 800 degrees centigrade; surface pressure: 7 MPa; cycle number: 107 cycles; and amplitude: 0.35 mm. As seen from Table 1, a wear amount of 600 μm or more is measured on the Ni alloy, but no wear is detected on the coating film of cBN. From this result, it is seen that cBN is superior in abrasive properties because it wore down the Ni alloy. It is to be noted that the Ni alloy of the upper test piece is an alloy constituted of a component ratio of Ni: 57%, Cr: 15%, Co: 15%, Mo: 5%, Ti: 3.5%, Al: 4.4, C, 0.1%.
  • When a so-called discharge coating method is used to coat the tip end of the rotating/rotatable member, such as the blade, with the coating film containing ceramics such as cBN, the hard coat can be applied easily by use of characteristics of the ceramics such as cBN, and a coating film, having good adhesion and quality level, can be coated as compared to conventional methods such as by welding and by thermal spraying. According to the present invention, because a thin coating film (or a layer) having a thickness of several microns to 30 μm can be formed, the coating film is not easily cracked, and precision of the thickness can be controlled by a unit of several p.m. Therefore, it is possible to provide a coating method optimum for precision components, such as the blade and labyrinth seal.
  • Coarser surface roughness, corresponding to abrasive properties for shaving the opponent component to be ground, is preferable. In the above example, the surface roughness is coarser than 1.2 μmRa.
  • As described above, because the so-called discharge coating method is used in the present invention, pretreatments (such as the masking and blast process) are unnecessary, and a coating film having good adhesion can be easily and inexpensively formed. Furthermore, a coating film containing ceramics, such as cubic boron nitride (cBN), can be coated. Therefore, a portion of the rotating/rotatable member requiring abrasive properties can be coated with a hard coating film that is superior in abrasive properties.
  • A coating layer of the hard material is hard, but has little ductility. Therefore, a tensile stress applied to the component coated with the hard material is not borne by the mother material of the component when the component has a large ductility. Instead, the tensile stress is borne only by the coating layer of the surface, which coats the component. Therefore, the surface (i.e., the coating layer) cracks, and there is a possibility that the crack will develop into the mother material. To avoid this cracking, a method of imparting ductility to the otherwise hard coating layer is used.
  • Table 2 shows the number of cycles reaching destruction in a high cycle fatigue (HCF) test in which an outer diameter of a round rod is coated with the hard material and a tensile load is going to be repeated in an axial direction. Without any coating of hard material, the round rod material does not break up to one million cycles. However, when a coating in which the ratio of coated area coated with hard material of the coating surface is 98% (that is, when the ratio of coverage of coated portions 100 to uncoated portions 101 of an area coated with the coating film is 98% of the coated surface (i.e., coated area) instead of 95% or less as shown in FIG. 4), the round rod material is observed to break at 20 thousand cycles. However, when the coverage is decreased to about 95%, as shown in Table 2, the round rod material does not break up to one million cycles.
  • TABLE 2
    Coating state Cycle number of break
    No coating One million cycles
    98% coverage of TiC 20 thousand cycles
    95% coverage of TiC One million cycles
    HFC test conditions: 500° C., 650 MPa, pull of round rod having a diameter of 5 mm in axial direction at 30 Hz
  • When the coverage of the coating is lowered to 95% or less, the abrasive properties of the whole coating surface are slightly sacrificed in order to increase the ductility of the coating surface. When the coverage is raised, ductility decreases as evident from Table 2, and fatigue strength drops. However, at 95% coverage, fatigue strength does not drop in a large manner (if at all), although the abrasive properties drop a little. In accordance with one method of the present invention for lowering the coverage, discharge time is reduced to a range in which complete discharge does not occur, and in this way the coverage can be reduced. The coating treatment is usually performed for a time of five minutes/square centimeter, but the time may be reduced to about 3.8 minutes/square centimeter.
  • A calculation equation is as follows:
  • Time for obtaining a coverage of 95%=time for obtaining a coverage of 98%*LOG(1−0.95)/LOG(1−0.98). A coverage of 98% is regarded as a coverage of 100% for the purpose of the calculation equation. To calculate the time from a time for obtaining a coverage of 50%, 0.98 in LOG(1−0.98) is changed to 0.5.
  • In another method, as shown in FIG. 5, by the use of an electrode to which metal powder, which is of a type that is not easily carbonized, is added, ductile properties of the metal may be imparted to the coating layer. When the electrode contains 5% or more of such a metal that is not easily carbonized, 5% or more of a portion having the ductility in the coating layer remains, and an effect similar to that of Table 2 can be expected. Also in this method, the abrasive properties of the whole coating surface are slightly sacrificed in order to enhance the ductility of the coating layer. Examples of metals that are not easily carbonized include cobalt, nickel, and iron. With respect to coverage, one blade has been described. However, there are a large number of blades in a turbine. Therefore, even if the coverage of the coating layer is low, or even if the abrasive properties are not observed in a certain portion of a certain blade, the other blades can cover the abrasive properties. This principle also applies to an annular seal because if one portion on the circumference of the annular seal has the abrasive properties, it is possible to obtain abrasive properties for the annular seal (See, e.g., FIG. 12).
  • Moreover, as still another method of preventing cracking, as shown in FIG. 6, a porous layer is formed as a base for the coating layer of hard material in order to prevent the cracking of the coating layer from developing and then progressing into the mother material. The porous layer is formed as a base, and is disposed under the coating layer, which is formed on the porous layer. This base is also formed by discharge coating. The porous layer having a thickness of 0.05 mm or more can be formed by using a second electrode obtained by compression molding of a powder of metals such as Stellite. Thereafter, the porous layer is coated with hard material.
  • Moreover, the surface of the coating of the hard material is peened so that the surface is accordingly stretched, and compression stress remains so that tensile stress is reduced even when the mother material is elongated. The fatigue strength can thus be enhanced by the effect of peening. FIGS. 7A to 7C, 8A to 8C, 9A and 9B are perspective views showing fifth to seventh embodiments of the rotating/rotatable member of the present invention. It is to be noted that in these figures, a platform or a dovetail on a disk side is omitted from the drawings.
  • In the turbine blade 1 of FIG. 7A, the corner of the blade in a rotation advance direction (that is, the blade tip end of the blade surface on the back side), and a tip end surface are coated with a coating 20 of hard material. In a thin turbine blade of FIG. 7B, the blade tip end of the blade surface on the back side and the entire tip end surface are coated, and the opposite surface may not be coated. In the turbine blade of FIG. 7C, the blade tip end of the blade surface on the back side is coated, and the entire tip end surface is not coated.
  • In the turbine blade 2 provided with a chip shroud, as shown by FIG. 8A, the corner of the tip end of a chip fin 4 in the rotation advance direction, or the surface of the chip fin 4 in the rotation advance direction (that is, the backside surface of the tip end of the chip fin 4) are coated with a coating 21 of hard material. It is to be noted that the chip shroud 3 is disposed to prevent resonance of the blades 2 at the time of high-speed rotation of the gas turbine and to prevent a high-temperature gas from leaking to the outside of the blades 2.
  • For a small blade, as shown by FIG. 8B, the entire surface of the tip end and the surface of the rotation advance direction (i.e., on the backside surface of the tip end of the chip fin 4) are coated, and the opposite surface may not be coated. In the turbine blade of FIG. 8C, the surface of the rotation advance direction (i.e., the backside surface of the tip end) is coated, and the whole surface of the tip end is not coated.
  • In the compressor blade 1 of FIG. 9A, the corner of the blade in the rotation advance direction (that is, the blade tip end of a blade surface on the front side) and the tip end surface are coated with a coating 22 of hard material. In the compressor blade of FIG. 9B, the surface of the rotation advance direction (that is, the blade tip end of a blade surface on the front side is coated), and the entire surface of the tip end is not coated.
  • In the blades of FIGS. 9A and 9B, an abrasive property test was carried out by simulation of an actual device wherein, a difference was not observed in the abrasive property. As described above, the coating of hard material is applied so as to shave the abradable coating of the opposite component by using the tip ends of the blades 1, 2 thereby taking advantage of the hardness difference, at the time of driving the blades 1, 2, to maintain a minimum chip clearance. The abradable coating is applied on the casing or the shroud (i.e., opposite components). Moreover, this phenomenon starts by contact occurring between the casing, or the shroud, and the corners of the blades 1, 2 in the rotation advance direction, and the phenomenon ends when the casing or the shroud is shaved by the corners of the blades 1, 2. That is, after contact of the corner with the casing or shroud, another portion of the same blade hardly contacts the casing or the shroud. In consideration of this fact, the coating of hard material does not have to be applied over the entire region of the blade tip end as in the related art discussed above. As described in accordance with the present invention, it is sufficient that only a range of contact with the abradable coating (that is, only the corner of the rotation advance direction, or only the surface of the rotation advance direction of the blade that contracts the casing or shroud) is coated with coatings 20, 21, 22 of hard material. When the range of the portion of the blade to be coated is optimized in this manner, the range to be coated is narrowed, so the yield of products is increased, the operation time can be shortened, expensive coating material can be saved instead of wasted, and cost can be reduced.
  • FIG. 10 is a diagram showing a fifth embodiment of the coating method according to the present invention, and is a diagram showing the coating method of the blades shown in FIGS. 7A to 7C. In the coating method of the present invention, the blade 1 and a discharge electrode 23 are submerged in the processing tank 12 filled with the dielectric liquid (oil), the discharge electrode 23 is disposed in the vicinity of the corner in the rotation advance direction of the blade 1, a discharge is caused between them, and only the corner of the blade 1 in the rotation advance direction is coated with the coating 20 of hard material.
  • The coating 20 of hard material is formed to have a very thin thickness of 10 to 20 μm (exaggerated in the figure for ease of seeing the coating 20 in the figure). Therefore, after molding the blade 1 as usual, it is sufficient to apply the coating 20 of hard material only to a portion of contact with the opposite member (that is, only the corner of the rotation advance direction or the surface of the rotation advance direction). Needless to say, the corner of the blade 1 is shaved by the thickness of the coating 20 of hard material by machine processing, and a casting mold taking into consideration beforehand the thickness of the coating 20 may be used to mold the blade 1.
  • Moreover, in the case of a thin blade, the coating of hard material may be formed entirely on the rotation advance direction surface and on the tip end surface. However, the surface disposed opposite to the rotation advance direction surface does not have to be coated.
  • It is to be noted that only the sections of the blade 1 and discharge electrode 23 are shown in FIG. 10. In accordance with this coating method of the present invention, a discharge electrode 23 shaped so as to coat only the blade tip end of the blade surface on the back side and on the tip end surface is preferably used so that only the corner of the blade 1 in the rotation advance direction is subjected to the discharge coating. For example, the discharge electrode 23 has a substantially L-shaped section, and a shape curved along the back side of the blade as shown in FIG. 10.
  • The electrode may be processed beforehand into a product shape. However, alternatively, the electrode may be formed in accordance with the product shape by discharge on the discharge condition in which the electrode is easily consumed. Under this condition, the electrode is set to have a minus polarity, and the discharge is caused on a comparatively small energy condition on which the pulse width is set to 1 μs or less, and the current value is 10 A or less. In this way, damage of the product is suppressed, and the electrode can accord with the product shape. When the coating film is formed, the electrode is assumed to have the minus polarity, and the discharge is caused under a comparatively large energy condition in which the pulse width is about 2 to 10 μs, and the current value is about 5 to 20 A.
  • It is to be noted that although not shown, for the turbine blade provided with the chip shroud 2, as shown in FIGS. 8A to 8C, such an electrode may be used to coat the corner of the chip fin 4 in the rotation advance direction.
  • In discharge coating, the discharge is caused on the surfaces disposed opposite to each other by application of a voltage between the blade 1 and the discharge electrode 23 submerged in dielectric liquid. Consequently, the surface of the discharge electrode 23 is molten by the discharge, and the molten element is attached on the surface of the blade 1 to form the alloy on the surface. A solidified coating material is used for the material of the discharge electrode 23.
  • Because the thickness of the coating can be controlled to the degree of several micrometers, discharge coating is a coating method optimum for coating precision components such as the blade 1. Moreover, those places where the discharge does not occur are not coated. Therefore, because the portion to be coated can be coated locally, the pretreatments (such as masking) are unnecessary. Because heat generation is small, the blade is not thermally deformed, and consequently post-treatment is also unnecessary.
  • As described above, in accordance with the present invention, because the coating range of the hard material is optimized, the yield of products can be enhanced. Because operation time can be shortened, and the coating material can be used without waste, the cost of production can be reduced. Furthermore, because the so-called discharge coating is used, only the corner of the rotation advance direction of the blade, or the surface of the rotation advance direction, is easily and inexpensively coated with the hard material.
  • Moreover, even when all of the blades assembled onto a rotor are not coated with the hard material, as long as some of the blades are coated with the hard material, then it is still possible to obtain the effect as if all of the blades were coated. This principle also applies to the annular seal as long as one or more portions on the circumference of the annular seal have the abrasive properties.
  • FIG. 11 is a schematic diagram of a labyrinth seal structure according to an eighth embodiment of the rotating member of the present invention, and FIG. 12 is a front view of the labyrinth seal of FIG. 11. FIG. 13 is a schematic diagram of a discharge processing machine according to the eighth embodiment of the coating method according to the present invention.
  • As shown in FIGS. 11 and 12, a labyrinth seal structure 31, according to an embodiment of the present invention, is used in the gas turbine of a jet engine and inhibits a leak of combustion gas between an engine stationary component 33 and an engine rotating component 35. The labyrinth seal structure 31 includes, as constituting elements, a honeycomb-shaped stationary-side honeycomb seal component 37 integrally disposed on the engine stationary component 33, and a rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 disposed inside the stationary-side honeycomb seal component 37 and capable of rotating integrally with the engine rotating component 35. It is to be noted that a stationary-side abradable seal component, whose inside is coated with the abradable coat, may also be used instead of the stationary-side honeycomb seal component 37.
  • A concrete example of the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39, which is an important part of an embodiment of the present invention, is as follows. Specifically, an annular seal component main body 41, which is a main body of the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39, is integrally disposed on the engine rotating component 35, and a plurality of annular seal fins 43 are integrally formed on the outer peripheral surface of the seal component main body 41. Tip edges of the respective seal fins 43 are coated with coats 45 of the hard material. Furthermore, for forming each coat 45 of hard material, an electrode 47 for coating having consumability (see FIG. 13) is used, and a pulsed discharge is caused between the electrode 47 for coating and the tip edge of the seal fin 43. The constituting material of the electrode 47 for coating, or the reactant of the constituting material, forms into the coating film containing the hard material on a plurality of treated portions in the tip edges of the seal fins 43 due to the discharge energy. Accordingly, a plurality of (four in the embodiment of the present invention) local coats 45 a of hard material are applied at equal intervals.
  • In this disclosure, in accordance with the embodiments of the present invention, in general, the phrase “the electrode for coating having consumability” means a green compact electrode (including a thermally treated green compact electrode) obtained by compression molding of a powdered metal (including a metal compound), a mixed material of the powdered metal and a powdered ceramic, or the powdered ceramic having conductivity. The phrase “the electrode for coating having consumability” may also mean a silicon electrode formed of solid silicon. It is to be noted that ceramic having conductivity may be subjected to a surface treatment for forming a conductive coating film on the ceramic powder, and molded by compression, so that conductivity is secured. Especially, examples of the “powdered metal” include Ti, Co, and the like, and examples of the “powdered ceramic” include cBN, TiC, TiN, TiAlN, AlN, TiB2, WC, Cr3C2, SiC, ZrC, VC, B4C, Si3N4, ZrO2Y, Al2O3, and the like in accordance with the present invention.
  • The examples of the material that reacts by discharge energy to form the coating film containing hard material include Ti, W, Cr, Zr, Si, V, Mo, Nb. Furthermore, the electrode 47 for coating has a shape approximate to that of the portion to be treated in the tip edges of the seal fins 43.
  • Next, a concrete example of a discharge processing machine 49, for use in coating the coat 45 of hard material, and a coating method for coating the coat 45 of hard material will be described with reference to FIG. 13. Specifically, in a discharge processing machine 49, according to an embodiment of the present invention, a bed 51 is used as the processing machine base, and a table 53 is disposed on the bed 51. The table 53 can be moved in X-axis directions (i.e., left and right directions shown in FIG. 13) by driving an X-axis servo motor (not shown), and can be moved in Y-axis directions i.e., front and back directions of a sheet surface of FIG. 13) by driving a Y-axis servo motor (not shown). A processing tank 55 in which dielectric liquid L (such as dielectric oil) is disposed on the table 53, and a support plate 57 is disposed in the processing tank 55. A support tool 59, to which the seal component main body 41 is fixed, is disposed on the support plate 57. A processing head 61 is disposed via a column (not shown) above the bed 51 (above in FIG. 13), and this processing head 61 can move in Z-axis directions (i.e., upward and downward shown directions in FIG. 13) by driving a Z-axis servo motor. Moreover, an electrode hold member 63 for holding the electrode 47 for coating is disposed on the processing head 61.
  • It is to be noted that the electrode hold member 63 and the support tool 59 are electrically connected to a power supply 65. Therefore, the seal component main body 41 is fixed by the support tool 59 in a state in which a portion of the tip edge of the seal fin 43 to be treated in the peripheral direction is directed right upwards in the processing tank 55. Next, the table 53 is moved in the X-axis and Y-axis directions (at least either one of these directions) by driving the X-axis and Y-axis servo motors. In this way, the position of the seal fin 43 is determined such that the portion of the tip end of the seal fin 43 to be treated faces the electrode 47 for coating. Moreover, the electrode 47 for coating is moved integrally with the processing head 61 in the Z-axis direction by driving the Z-axis servo motor, while a pulsed voltage is generated between the electrode 47 for coating and the portion of the tip end of the tip fin 43 to be treated in the dielectric liquid L. Accordingly, the electrode material of the electrode 47 for coating is locally diffused in, and/or welded to, the portion of the tip edge of the seal fin 43 to be treated by discharge energy, and the portion of the tip edge of one seal fin 43 to be treated can locally be coated with a local coat 45 a of hard material.
  • Furthermore, when the table 53 is moved in the Y-axis directions by driving the Y-axis servo motor, the position of another seal fin 43 is determined such that the portion of the tip fin of the seal fin 43 to be treated faces the electrode 47 for coating. Then, as described above, the electrode material of the electrode for coating 47 is locally diffused in, and/or welded to, the portion of the tip edge of this seal fin 43 to be treated by discharge energy, and the portion of the tip edge of the seal fin 43 to be treated is locally coated with the local coat 45 a of hard material.
  • After locally coating the portion of the tip edge of a plurality of the seal fins 43 to be treated with the local coat 45 a of hard material, a similar operation is repeated. In this way, also other portions of the tip edges of a plurality of the seal fins 43 to be treated are also locally coated with the local coats 45 a of hard material.
  • Next, the function of an embodiment of the present invention will be described. The rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 includes the coat 45 of hard material. Therefore, by integrally rotating the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 and the engine rotating component 35, even when the engine stationary component is deformed and the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 contacts with the stationary-side honeycomb seal component 37, the stationary-side honeycomb seal component 37 is only shaved by the coat 45 of hard material in the rotating labyrinth seal component 39. The rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 is substantially hardly shaved at all.
  • Accordingly, the clearance between the stationary-side honeycomb seal component 37 and the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 is inhibited from increasing during rotation of the engine rotating component 35, and the seal effect of the labyrinth seal structure 31 can be kept in an appropriate state (i.e., optimized). The rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 is set beforehand so as to slightly contact the stationary-side honeycomb seal component 37 at the time of the initial rotation of the engine rotating component 35. Accordingly, the clearance between the stationary-side honeycomb seal component 37 and the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 can be set to be as small as possible during, and after, the initial rotation and the seal effect of the labyrinth seal structure 31 can further be enhanced.
  • Moreover, coating of the coats 45 of hard material is performed on portions of the tip edges of the seal fins 43 by diffusing and/or welding electrode material of the electrode 47 for coating by discharge energy generated between the electrode for coating 47 and the portion of the tip edge of the seal fin 43, which is performed without performing plating or thermal spraying. Therefore, during production of the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39, the coating post-treatments (such as the blast treatment and the process of removing masking tape) are unnecessary.
  • Furthermore, the boundary portion between the coat 45 of hard material formed by discharge energy and the mother body of the seal fin 43 has alloy composition changing properties, and the coat of hard material can be firmly connected to the tip edge of the seal fin 43. Moreover, the coat 45 of hard material includes a plurality of local coats 45 a of hard material. In other words, the electrode material 47 of the electrode for coating is locally diffused in, and/or welded to, a plurality of portions to be treated along the peripheral direction in the tip edge of the seal fin 43, but not along the whole periphery of the tip edge of the seal fin 43. Therefore, the electrode 47 for coating can be formed to have a small and simple shape in accordance with the size and/or the shape of the portion of the tip edge of the seal fin 43 to be treated. Accordingly, the amount of the electrode material used to form the electrode 47 for coating can be reduced.
  • It is to be noted that as described above, the coat 45 of hard material (i.e., local coat 45 a of hard material) can be connected firmly to the tip edge of the seal fin 43. Therefore, even when the entire tip edge periphery of the seal fin 43 is not coated with the coat 45 of hard material, sufficient abrasive properties of the entire rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 can be achieved by the plurality of local coats 45 a of hard material.
  • As described above, according to an embodiment of the present invention, during production of the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39, the coating pretreatments (such as the blast process and the process of attaching the masking tape), and the coating post-treatments (such as the process of removing the masking tape) are not required. Therefore, the operation time required for production of the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 is reduced, and it is easy to enhance the productivity yield of the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal components 39. Moreover, because the coat 45 of hard material can be connected firmly to the tip edge of the seal fin 43, the coat 45 of hard material does not easily peel off from the tip edge of the seal fin 43, and the quality level of the rotating labyrinth seal component 39 is stabilized.
  • Furthermore, the entire rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 has sufficient abrasive properties, and the electrode 47 for coating can be formed to have a small and simple shape in accordance with the size/shape of the portion to be treated of the tip edge in the seal fin 43. Moreover, the amount of the electrode material used to form the electrode for coating 47 can be reduced. Therefore, the production cost of the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component 39 can be reduced.
  • It is to be noted that the present invention is not limited to the description of the embodiments of the present invention. For example, instead of performing the discharge in the dielectric liquid L, the discharge can be performed in an electrically insulating gas. Thus, various modifications can be carried out within the scope of the present invention.
  • As described above, according to the present invention, during production of the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component, the coating pretreatments, such as the blast process and the process of attaching masking tape, and the coating post-treatments, such as the process of removing the masking tape, are not required. Therefore, operation time required for production of the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component is reduced, and it is easy to enhance the productivity yield of the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal components. Moreover, because the coat of hard material can be firmly connected to the tip edge of the seal fin, the coat of hard material does not easily peel off from the tip edge of the seal fin, and the quality level of the labyrinth seal is stabilized.
  • Furthermore, in addition to the above-described effect, the entire rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component has sufficient abrasive properties, and the electrode for coating can be formed to have a small and simple shape in accordance with the size/shape of the portion to be treated at the tip edge in the seal fin. Moreover, the amount of electrode material used to form the electrode for coating can be reduced. Therefore, the production cost for the rotating/rotatable labyrinth seal component can be reduced.
  • It is to be noted that some preferable embodiments of the present invention have been described, but it would be understood that the scope of the present invention is not limited to these embodiments. Conversely, the scope of the present invention includes all improvements, modifications, and equivalents included in the appended claims.
  • The method in which the electrode is formed by compression molding of powder using a press is described in the above. However, it is apparent that the method for forming the electrode is not limited to the compression molding as long as the electrode is formed by using powder. As a method for forming the electrode, there are a method that uses slip, a method that uses an MIM (Metal Injection Molding), a method that uses thermal spraying, a method that uses nano powder accompanying a jet stream, and the like. In the method that uses slip, powder is dispersed in a solvent, and the solution is put in a porous mold such as gypsum to remove the solvent so that the electrode can be molded. In the method that uses the MIM, a mixture of powder and binder is kneaded, and then injected into a heated mold. In the method that uses thermal spraying, heated powder is sprayed to combine a part of the sprayed powder, forming the electrode. These methods are different in a manner of forming the electrode, but a purpose of these methods is the same in terms of forming the electrode by using powder. In other words, when the combination of powder reaches a desired state, the combined powder can be then used as the electrode.

Claims (15)

1-9. (canceled)
10. A rotating member having an abrasive coating film on a part thereof that is formed by a pulsed discharge between the rotating member and a discharge electrode of a green compact or solid silicon in dielectric liquid or gas,
wherein the green compact includes a hard material or a material that changes into a hard material by the discharge, and
the abrasive coating film includes the hard material of the green compact or the hard material that is changed from the material of the green compact or solid silicon by the discharge.
11. The rotating member according to claim 10, wherein a coverage of coating is 95% or less in a coating film forming portion.
12. The rotating member according to claim 10, wherein the discharge electrode of the green compact includes the hard material or the material that changes into the hard material by the discharge and includes 5% or more by volume of a metal which does not easily react into carbide.
13. The rotating member according to claim 10, wherein the coating film includes:
a first porous layer that is formed on the part of the rotating member by a pulsed discharge between the rotating member and a discharge electrode of a green compact or solid silicon in dielectric liquid or gas, wherein the first porous layer includes a hard material of the green compact or a hard material that is changed from a material of the green compact or solid silicon by the discharge; and
a second layer that is formed on the first porous layer by a pulsed discharge between the first porous layer and a discharge electrode of a green compact or solid silicon in dielectric liquid or gas, wherein the second layer includes a hard material of the green compact or a hard material that is changed from a material of the green compact or solid silicon by the discharge.
14. The rotating member according to claim 10, wherein the coating film includes a peened layer that is formed by penning the formed coating film.
15. The rotating member according to claim 10, wherein the discharge electrode includes the green compact, the thermally treated green compact or solid silicon,
the green compact is obtained by compression molding of a powdered metal, a powder of a compound of the metal, a powder of a ceramic or a mixture thereof; and
the ceramic is one of or a mixture of cBN, Cr3C2, TiC, TiN, TiAlN, TiB2, ZrO2—Y, ZrC, VC, B4C, WC, SiC, Si3N4, and Al2O3.
16. (canceled)
17. The rotating member according to claim 10, wherein the coating film is formed on a portion of the part on the rotating member that faces or contacts with an opponent component.
18. The rotating member according to claim 10, comprising a rotating member body and a casing component that covers the rotating member body,
wherein the coating film having hard concavity and convexity is formed on a part of the rotating member body by repeatedly generating discharge pulse between the rotating member body and the discharge electrode to transfer the hard material of the discharge electrode or the hard material changed from the material of the discharge electrode onto the part of the rotating member body, and
the casing component is made of a material of which hardness is smaller than that of the hard material of the coating film.
19. The rotating member according to claim 10, wherein the rotating member is a blade, the blade and a discharge electrode are submerged in dielectric liquid or gas to dispose the discharge electrode in the vicinity of a corner of a blade tip end in a rotation advance direction and/or the vicinity of a surface of the blade tip end in the rotation advance direction and/or the vicinity of the blade tip end surface, the discharge is generated between the blade and the discharge electrode so that the coating including the hard material is formed on the corner of the blade tip end in the rotation advance direction, or the adjacent surface to the blade tip in the rotation advance direction, or the end surface of the blade tip, or both of the adjacent surface to the blade tip in the rotation advance direction and the end surface of the blade tip.
20. The rotating member according to claim 10, wherein the abrasive coating film including the hard material is formed on not all, but some of blades of a rotor or a blisk.
21. The rotating member according to claim 10, wherein the rotating member is a rotating labyrinth seal component which is one of structure elements of a labyrinth seal structure to suppress a leak of a gas or liquid between a stationary component and a rotating component,
the rotating member comprises:
an annular seal component main body; and
an annular seal fin integrally formed on an outer peripheral surface of the seal component main body,
a tip edge of the seal fin is coated with the abrasive coating film including the hard material,
the discharge electrode having consumability is used, a pulsed discharge is generated between the discharge electrode and the tip edge of the seal fin in dielectric liquid or gas so that the abrasive coating film is formed to include the hard material of the discharge electrode or the hard material changed from the material of the discharge electrode by the discharge.
22. The rotating member according to claim 21, wherein the abrasive coating film including the hard material comprises a plurality of local coating films locally formed on a plurality of portions in a peripheral direction in the tip edge of the seal fin.
23-34. (canceled)
US12/425,685 2002-10-09 2009-04-17 Rotating member and method for coating the same Abandoned US20100124490A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US12/425,685 US20100124490A1 (en) 2002-10-09 2009-04-17 Rotating member and method for coating the same

Applications Claiming Priority (9)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
JP295964/2002 2002-10-09
JP2002295964 2002-10-09
JP2002295966A JP4096301B2 (en) 2002-10-09 2002-10-09 Rotor blade and coating method thereof
JP295966/2002 2002-10-09
JP167075/2003 2003-06-11
JP2003167075 2003-06-11
PCT/JP2003/012945 WO2004033755A1 (en) 2002-10-09 2003-10-09 Rotor and coating method therefor
US10/976,215 US7537809B2 (en) 2002-10-09 2004-10-29 Rotating member and method for coating the same
US12/425,685 US20100124490A1 (en) 2002-10-09 2009-04-17 Rotating member and method for coating the same

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US10/976,215 Division US7537809B2 (en) 2002-10-09 2004-10-29 Rotating member and method for coating the same

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20100124490A1 true US20100124490A1 (en) 2010-05-20

Family

ID=32096707

Family Applications (3)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US10/976,215 Expired - Fee Related US7537809B2 (en) 2002-10-09 2004-10-29 Rotating member and method for coating the same
US12/425,685 Abandoned US20100124490A1 (en) 2002-10-09 2009-04-17 Rotating member and method for coating the same
US12/425,717 Expired - Fee Related US7918460B2 (en) 2002-10-09 2009-04-17 Rotating member and method for coating the same

Family Applications Before (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US10/976,215 Expired - Fee Related US7537809B2 (en) 2002-10-09 2004-10-29 Rotating member and method for coating the same

Family Applications After (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US12/425,717 Expired - Fee Related US7918460B2 (en) 2002-10-09 2009-04-17 Rotating member and method for coating the same

Country Status (7)

Country Link
US (3) US7537809B2 (en)
EP (1) EP1550741A4 (en)
KR (1) KR101004236B1 (en)
CN (1) CN1692179B (en)
CA (1) CA2483528C (en)
TW (1) TWI272993B (en)
WO (1) WO2004033755A1 (en)

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US9359682B2 (en) 2009-07-28 2016-06-07 Mitsubishi Electric Corporation Erosion resistant machine component, method for forming surface layer of machine component, and method for manufacturing steam turbine
US9382801B2 (en) 2014-02-26 2016-07-05 General Electric Company Method for removing a rotor bucket from a turbomachine rotor wheel
DE102015217670A1 (en) * 2015-09-15 2017-03-16 Rolls-Royce Deutschland Ltd & Co Kg Sealing element, sealing system with a sealing element, turbomachine with a sealing system and method for producing a sealing element
US9969021B2 (en) * 2015-11-27 2018-05-15 Intai Technology Corp. Electrochemical machining apparatus for forming turbine blades

Families Citing this family (44)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US9284647B2 (en) 2002-09-24 2016-03-15 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Method for coating sliding surface of high-temperature member, high-temperature member and electrode for electro-discharge surface treatment
RU2320775C2 (en) * 2002-09-24 2008-03-27 Исикавадзима-Харима Хэви Индастриз Ко., Лтд. Method for depositing of coating onto sliding surface of fire-resistant member, fire-resistant member, and electrode for electric discharge treatment of surface
WO2004033755A1 (en) * 2002-10-09 2004-04-22 Ishikawajima-Harima Heavy Industries Co., Ltd. Rotor and coating method therefor
TWI286955B (en) * 2003-06-11 2007-09-21 Ishikawajima Harima Heavy Ind Method for repairing machine part, method for forming restored machine part, method for manufacturing machine part, gas turbine engine, electric discharge machine, method for repairing turbine component, and method for forming restored turbine component
JP4534633B2 (en) * 2004-07-02 2010-09-01 三菱電機株式会社 Discharge surface treatment method and surface-treated mold
WO2006095799A1 (en) * 2005-03-09 2006-09-14 Ihi Corporation Surface treatment method and repair method
US20060201868A1 (en) * 2005-03-11 2006-09-14 Simmons Blake A Methods and devices for high-throughput dielectrophoretic concentration
EP1715140A1 (en) * 2005-04-21 2006-10-25 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Turbine blade with a cover plate and a protective layer on the cover plate
JP4830812B2 (en) 2006-11-24 2011-12-07 株式会社Ihi Compressor blade
CN101680097A (en) * 2007-03-26 2010-03-24 株式会社Ihi Heat resistant component
JP5045744B2 (en) * 2007-03-30 2012-10-10 株式会社Ihi Discharge surface treatment method and repair method
US8205335B2 (en) * 2007-06-12 2012-06-26 United Technologies Corporation Method of repairing knife edge seals
US8844976B2 (en) * 2007-06-13 2014-09-30 ACC La Jonchére Seal assembly including a multilayered sliding member
JP5101317B2 (en) * 2008-01-25 2012-12-19 三菱重工業株式会社 Seal structure
DE102009016803A1 (en) * 2009-04-09 2010-10-14 Rolls-Royce Deutschland Ltd & Co Kg Labyrinth rubbing seal for a turbomachine
SG166033A1 (en) * 2009-05-08 2010-11-29 Pratt & Whitney Services Pte Ltd Method of electrical discharge surface repair of a variable vane trunnion
DE102009055914A1 (en) * 2009-11-27 2011-06-09 Rolls-Royce Deutschland Ltd & Co Kg Sealing rings for a labyrinth seal
CN102218638B (en) * 2010-04-14 2012-11-28 王茂才 Process method for repairing gas turbine vanes by micro-arc deposition coating
EP2386726B1 (en) * 2010-05-12 2012-10-31 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Channel wall section for a ring-shaped flow channel of an axial turbomaschine with blade tip gap adjustment, corresponding axial compressor and gas turbine
JP5403157B2 (en) 2010-05-24 2014-01-29 株式会社Ihi Vibration damping blade for fluid
WO2012035580A1 (en) * 2010-09-16 2012-03-22 三菱電機株式会社 Discharge surface treatment method
US8512098B1 (en) * 2010-09-28 2013-08-20 Jeffrey Bonner Machining technique using a plated superabrasive grinding wheel on a swiss style screw machine
CN102343392A (en) * 2011-06-14 2012-02-08 昆山市瑞捷精密模具有限公司 Preparation method of ferritic stainless steel die with hard film structure
GB201116829D0 (en) * 2011-09-30 2011-11-09 Rolls Royce Plc Wear resistant coating and use thereof
DE102011087207A1 (en) * 2011-11-28 2013-05-29 Aktiebolaget Skf Labyrinth seal with different wear labyrinth rings
EP2604797B1 (en) 2011-12-13 2020-01-22 MTU Aero Engines GmbH Rotor blade with a rib assembly with an abrasive coating
FR2985759B1 (en) * 2012-01-17 2014-03-07 Snecma MOBILE AUB OF TURBOMACHINE
CN103619525B (en) * 2012-02-29 2016-10-12 住友电气工业株式会社 Coating throw and manufacture method thereof
JP6024739B2 (en) * 2012-02-29 2016-11-16 住友電気工業株式会社 Coated rotating tool and manufacturing method thereof
JP5932538B2 (en) * 2012-07-20 2016-06-08 株式会社東芝 CO2 turbine, CO2 turbine manufacturing method, and power generation system
FR3001758B1 (en) * 2013-02-01 2016-07-15 Snecma TURBOMACHINE ROTOR BLADE
DE102013219766A1 (en) * 2013-09-30 2015-04-16 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Adhesive seal and seal arrangement
US20170016454A1 (en) * 2015-02-25 2017-01-19 United Technologies Corporation Method for coating compressor blade tips
CN107250552B (en) * 2015-02-27 2020-02-14 三菱重工发动机和增压器株式会社 Method for manufacturing supercharger
DE102015206516A1 (en) * 2015-04-13 2016-10-13 MTU Aero Engines AG Labyrinth seal with improved sealing ribs
GB201508637D0 (en) * 2015-05-20 2015-07-01 Rolls Royce Plc A gas turbine engine component with an abrasive coating
CN105441941B (en) * 2016-01-07 2018-08-24 西南交通大学 A kind of pattern method for drafting
EP3282130A1 (en) * 2016-08-10 2018-02-14 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Layer system, impeller, method to produce
CN106191859B (en) * 2016-09-06 2019-03-29 兰州荣翔轨道交通科技有限公司 Spindle-electromagnetic drive electrode rotary vibration type high-energy micro-arc spark deposition knife handle
CN106191858B (en) * 2016-09-06 2018-12-18 兰州荣翔轨道交通科技有限公司 A kind of main shaft-pendulum driving electrodes rotating vibrating type high energy micro arc deposition knife handle
US11078588B2 (en) 2017-01-09 2021-08-03 Raytheon Technologies Corporation Pulse plated abrasive grit
US11346232B2 (en) * 2018-04-23 2022-05-31 Rolls-Royce Corporation Turbine blade with abradable tip
US11002701B2 (en) * 2018-11-07 2021-05-11 Cameron International Corporation Electrically smart multi-layered coating for condition-base monitoring
IT201900001173A1 (en) * 2019-01-25 2020-07-25 Nuovo Pignone Tecnologie Srl Turbine with a ring wrapping around rotor blades and method for limiting the loss of working fluid in a turbine

Citations (106)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2964420A (en) * 1955-06-14 1960-12-13 Union Carbide Corp Refractory coated body
US3197861A (en) * 1960-06-01 1965-08-03 Continental Can Co Production of non-porous vacuum metallized coatings on strip material
US3444058A (en) * 1967-01-16 1969-05-13 Union Carbide Corp Electrodeposition of refractory metals
US3444059A (en) * 1966-06-27 1969-05-13 Syntex Corp Electrolytic reduction of cyclopentanophenanthrene derivatives
US3552479A (en) * 1967-11-22 1971-01-05 Martin Metals Co Casting process involving cooling of a shell mold prior to casting metal therein
US3660882A (en) * 1969-04-28 1972-05-09 Boehler & Co Ag Geb Process for the production of turbine blades
US3754899A (en) * 1970-12-14 1973-08-28 J Kanter Austenitic alloy containing boron and processes for manufacturing thesame
US3778586A (en) * 1970-04-02 1973-12-11 Composite Sciences Process for coating metals using resistance heating of preformed layer
US3853602A (en) * 1971-12-03 1974-12-10 Nippon Piston Ring Co Ltd Sliding member
US3890456A (en) * 1973-08-06 1975-06-17 United Aircraft Corp Process of coating a gas turbine engine alloy substrate
US3961910A (en) * 1973-05-25 1976-06-08 Chromalloy American Corporation Rhodium-containing superalloy coatings and methods of making same
US4049428A (en) * 1971-03-25 1977-09-20 Union Carbide Corporation Metal porous abradable seal
US4124737A (en) * 1976-12-30 1978-11-07 Union Carbide Corporation High temperature wear resistant coating composition
US4193852A (en) * 1977-06-14 1980-03-18 Inoue-Japax Research Incorporated Method and apparatus for electrical machining with a multi-guided travelling electrode
US4414249A (en) * 1980-01-07 1983-11-08 United Technologies Corporation Method for producing metallic articles having durable ceramic thermal barrier coatings
US4520087A (en) * 1982-03-05 1985-05-28 Kabushiki Kaisha Daini Seikosha Divalent silver oxide cell including cadmium and tellunium
US4735678A (en) * 1987-04-13 1988-04-05 Olin Corporation Forming a circuit pattern in a metallic tape by electrical discharge machining
US4735656A (en) * 1986-12-29 1988-04-05 United Technologies Corporation Abrasive material, especially for turbine blade tips
US4744725A (en) * 1984-06-25 1988-05-17 United Technologies Corporation Abrasive surfaced article for high temperature service
US4797527A (en) * 1985-02-06 1989-01-10 Kanegafuchi Kagaku Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Electrode for electric discharge machining and method for producing the same
US4802828A (en) * 1986-12-29 1989-02-07 United Technologies Corporation Turbine blade having a fused metal-ceramic tip
US4818388A (en) * 1986-12-09 1989-04-04 Taikisha Ltd. Paint waste separating and collecting apparatus
US4828934A (en) * 1986-12-12 1989-05-09 Vapor Technologies, Inc. Method of protecting ceramic bodies against mechanical and thermal action
US4851188A (en) * 1987-12-21 1989-07-25 United Technologies Corporation Method for making a turbine blade having a wear resistant layer sintered to the blade tip surface
US4878953A (en) * 1988-01-13 1989-11-07 Metallurgical Industries, Inc. Method of refurbishing cast gas turbine engine components and refurbished component
US4884820A (en) * 1987-05-19 1989-12-05 Union Carbide Corporation Wear resistant, abrasive laser-engraved ceramic or metallic carbide surfaces for rotary labyrinth seal members
US5024884A (en) * 1984-12-24 1991-06-18 United Technologies Corporation Abradable seal having particulate erosion resistance
US5074970A (en) * 1989-07-03 1991-12-24 Kostas Routsis Method for applying an abrasive layer to titanium alloy compressor airfoils
US5108555A (en) * 1989-06-07 1992-04-28 Cusp Dental Supply Co., Ltd. Electrode for electrical discharge machining and process for manufacturing the same
US5134032A (en) * 1991-02-25 1992-07-28 General Electric Company Abrasive particle and rotary seal therewith
US5231270A (en) * 1990-10-02 1993-07-27 Berkenhoff Gmbh Wire electrode
US5264011A (en) * 1992-09-08 1993-11-23 General Motors Corporation Abrasive blade tips for cast single crystal gas turbine blades
US5304288A (en) * 1990-08-08 1994-04-19 U.S. Philips Corporation Method of and device for the spark erosion of hardmeal objects
US5314304A (en) * 1991-08-15 1994-05-24 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Air Force Abradeable labyrinth stator seal
US5476363A (en) * 1993-10-15 1995-12-19 Charles E. Sohl Method and apparatus for reducing stress on the tips of turbine or compressor blades
US5485890A (en) * 1994-06-14 1996-01-23 Smith International, Inc. Rock bit
EP0705911A1 (en) * 1994-10-04 1996-04-10 General Electric Company Thermal barrier coating
US5603603A (en) * 1993-12-08 1997-02-18 United Technologies Corporation Abrasive blade tip
US5637239A (en) * 1995-03-31 1997-06-10 United Technologies Corporation Curved electrode and method for electrical discharge machining curved cooling holes
US5804789A (en) * 1996-06-12 1998-09-08 Japan Science And Technology Corporation Surface treating method and apparatus by electric discharge machining
US5837957A (en) * 1996-02-27 1998-11-17 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electric discharge machining apparatus
US5851678A (en) * 1995-04-06 1998-12-22 General Electric Company Composite thermal barrier coating with impermeable coating
US5858479A (en) * 1996-01-17 1999-01-12 Japan Science And Technology Corporation Surface treating method by electric discharge
US5866518A (en) * 1997-01-16 1999-02-02 The United States Of America As Represented By The Administrator Of The National Aeronautics And Space Administration Self-lubricating composite containing chromium oxide
US5897966A (en) * 1996-02-26 1999-04-27 General Electric Company High temperature alloy article with a discrete protective coating and method for making
US5906896A (en) * 1991-07-12 1999-05-25 Praxair S.T. Technology, Inc. Rotary seal member coated with a chromium carbide-age hardenable nickel base alloy
US5935407A (en) * 1997-11-06 1999-08-10 Chromalloy Gas Turbine Corporation Method for producing abrasive tips for gas turbine blades
US5972424A (en) * 1998-05-21 1999-10-26 United Technologies Corporation Repair of gas turbine engine component coated with a thermal barrier coating
US6086684A (en) * 1997-06-04 2000-07-11 Japan Science And Technology Corporation Electric discharge surface treating method and apparatus
US6190124B1 (en) * 1997-11-26 2001-02-20 United Technologies Corporation Columnar zirconium oxide abrasive coating for a gas turbine engine seal system
US6214475B1 (en) * 1997-10-02 2001-04-10 Daimler-Benz Ag Thermal insulating layer for a metallic component and its process of manufacture
US6221181B1 (en) * 1999-06-02 2001-04-24 Abb Research Ltd. Coating composition for high temperature protection
US20010009247A1 (en) * 2000-01-20 2001-07-26 Brooks William C. Method of removing a thermal barrier coating
US6274201B1 (en) * 1999-08-30 2001-08-14 General Electric Company Protective coatings for metal-based substrates, and related processes
US6311576B1 (en) * 1999-10-04 2001-11-06 Techmetric Inc. Anti-backlash nut for lead screw
WO2001083851A1 (en) * 2000-04-27 2001-11-08 Standard Aero Limited Multilayer thermal barrier coatings
US6314778B1 (en) * 1998-03-18 2001-11-13 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Rolling die and surface processing method for rolling die
US6358002B1 (en) * 1998-06-18 2002-03-19 United Technologies Corporation Article having durable ceramic coating with localized abradable portion
US6434823B1 (en) * 2000-10-10 2002-08-20 General Electric Company Method for repairing a coated article
US20020136613A1 (en) * 2001-03-21 2002-09-26 Artran, Inc. Rotary actuator for precision applications
US20020141868A1 (en) * 2001-03-27 2002-10-03 Ching-Pang Lee Cooled thermal barrier coating on a turbine blade tip
US6511762B1 (en) * 2000-11-06 2003-01-28 General Electric Company Multi-layer thermal barrier coating with transpiration cooling
US6532656B1 (en) * 2001-10-10 2003-03-18 General Electric Company Gas turbine engine compressor blade restoration method
US6588103B2 (en) * 2000-04-03 2003-07-08 Alstom (Switzerland) Ltd Tip material for a turbine blade and method of manufacturing or repairing a tip of a turbine blade
US6602561B1 (en) * 1998-05-13 2003-08-05 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electrode for discharge surface treatment and manufacturing method therefor and discharge surface treatment method and device
US6676741B2 (en) * 2000-03-31 2004-01-13 Flex Products, Inc. Methods for producing enhanced interference pigments
US20040022949A1 (en) * 2002-02-14 2004-02-05 Kazuhiro Hasezaki Abradable coating and method for forming same
US20040067317A1 (en) * 2002-10-03 2004-04-08 The General Electric Company Application method for abradable material
US20040091627A1 (en) * 2001-05-31 2004-05-13 Minoru Ohara Coating forming method and coating forming material, and abbrasive coating forming sheet
US20040096318A1 (en) * 2001-02-28 2004-05-20 Minoru Ohara Combustion engine, gas turbine, and polishing layer
US6783795B2 (en) * 1998-05-08 2004-08-31 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Power supply apparatus for discharge surface treatment
US6821579B2 (en) * 1998-11-13 2004-11-23 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Surface treatment method using electric discharge, and an electrode for the surface treatment method
US20050003172A1 (en) * 2002-12-17 2005-01-06 General Electric Company 7FAstage 1 abradable coatings and method for making same
US20050011593A1 (en) * 2003-07-15 2005-01-20 General Electric Company Process for a beta-phase nickel aluminide overlay coating
US20050063827A1 (en) * 2002-10-09 2005-03-24 Ishikawajima-Harima Heavy Industries Co., Ltd. Rotating member and method for coating the same
US20050129511A1 (en) * 2003-12-11 2005-06-16 Siemens Westinghouse Power Corporation Turbine blade tip with optimized abrasive
US20050211165A1 (en) * 2002-07-30 2005-09-29 Akihiro Goto Electrode for electric discharge surface treatment, electric discharge surface treatment method and electric discharge surface treatment apparatus
US20060021868A1 (en) * 1999-09-30 2006-02-02 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electrode for discharge surface treatment, a method of manufacturing the electrode for discharge surface treatment, and a discharge surface treatment method
US20060035068A1 (en) * 2002-09-24 2006-02-16 Ishikawajima-Harima Heavy Industries Co., Ltd. Method for coating sliding surface of high-temperature member, high-temperature member and electrode for electro-discharge surface treatment
US20060078738A1 (en) * 2003-06-04 2006-04-13 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Coating formed on base metal surface, heat-resistant machinery part, nozzle for processing machine, contact tip for welding, method of forming coating, method of manufacturing heat-resistant machinery part, method of manufacturing nozzle for processing machine, and method of manufacturing contact tip for welding
US20060086695A1 (en) * 2003-06-10 2006-04-27 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electrode for discharge surface treatment and method of evaluating the same, and discharge-surface-treating method
US20060086617A1 (en) * 2003-06-11 2006-04-27 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electrical-discharge surface-treatment method
US20060090997A1 (en) * 2003-06-11 2006-05-04 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Discharge surface-treatment method and discharge surface-treatment apparatus
US20060118402A1 (en) * 2003-05-29 2006-06-08 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electrode for electric discharge surface treatment, and method and apparatus for electric discharge surface treatment
US20060213777A1 (en) * 2003-06-04 2006-09-28 Akihiro Goto Discharge surface treatment method and discharge surface treatment apparatus
US20060240184A1 (en) * 2003-06-11 2006-10-26 Hiroyuki Ochiai Method for repairing machine part, method for forming restored machine part, method for manufacturing machine part, gas turbine engine, electric discharge machine, method for repairing turbine component, and method for forming restored turbine component
US20060280597A1 (en) * 2003-06-11 2006-12-14 Ishikawajima-Harima Heavy Industries Co., Ltd. Rotating member, housing, bearing, gearbox, rotating machine, shaft structure, and surface treatment method
US20070068793A1 (en) * 2003-05-29 2007-03-29 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electrode for discharge surface treatment, manufacturing method for electrode for discharge surface treatment, discharge surface treatment apparatus, and discharge surface treatment method
US20070104585A1 (en) * 2003-06-10 2007-05-10 Ishikawajima-Harima Heavy Industries Co., Ltd. Metal component, turbine component, gas turbine engine, surface processing method, and steam turbine engine
US20070160469A1 (en) * 2004-01-14 2007-07-12 Ishikawajima-Harima Heavy Industries Co., Ltd. Compressor, titanium-made rotor blade, jet engine and titanium-made rotor blade producing method
US20070184298A1 (en) * 2003-06-10 2007-08-09 Hiroyuki Ochiai Turbine component, gas turbine engine, method for manufacturing turbine component, surface processing method, vane component, metal component, and steam turbine engine
US20080066646A1 (en) * 2005-03-15 2008-03-20 Ihi Corporation Protective coating and metal structure
US20080304975A1 (en) * 2007-06-05 2008-12-11 Rolls-Royce Plc Method for producing abrasive tips for gas turbine blades
US7509736B2 (en) * 2003-10-10 2009-03-31 Snecma Process for repairing metallic pieces especially turbine blades of a gas turbine motor
US20090214352A1 (en) * 2005-03-09 2009-08-27 Ihi Corporation Surface treatment method and repair method
US20090288809A1 (en) * 2008-05-20 2009-11-26 Mitsubishi Electric Corporation Method of manufacturing electrical discharge surface treatment-purpose electrode and electrical discharge surface treatment-purpose electrode
US20100086398A1 (en) * 2002-09-24 2010-04-08 Ihi Corporation Method for coating sliding surface of high-temperature member, high-temperature member and electrode for electro-discharge surface treatment
US20100119864A1 (en) * 2007-03-26 2010-05-13 Ihi Corporation Heat-resistant component
US20100126871A1 (en) * 2007-03-30 2010-05-27 Ihi Corporation Discharging surface preparation method and repairing method
US20100180725A1 (en) * 2003-06-05 2010-07-22 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electrode for discharge surface treatment, manufacturing method and evaluation method for electrode for discharge surface treatment, discharge surface treatment apparatus, and discharge surface treatment method
US20100200548A1 (en) * 2007-07-18 2010-08-12 Ihi Corporation Fabrication method of electrode for spark surface modification, and spark surface modification electrode
US20100330302A1 (en) * 2008-01-30 2010-12-30 Ihi Corporation Discharge surface treatment method and coating block for discharge surface treatments
US7915559B2 (en) * 2003-06-04 2011-03-29 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electrode for electric discharge surface treatment, method for manufacturing electrode, and method for storing electrode
US20110135845A1 (en) * 2008-08-06 2011-06-09 Akihiro Goto Electrical discharge surface treatment method
US20110300311A1 (en) * 2009-02-18 2011-12-08 Ihi Corporation Production method of electrode and discharge surface treatment therewith
US8287968B2 (en) * 2006-04-05 2012-10-16 Mitsubishi Electric Corporation Coating film and coating-film forming method

Family Cites Families (33)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPS6117904A (en) 1984-07-04 1986-01-25 Hitachi Ltd Pattern detector
JPS61246301A (en) 1985-04-22 1986-11-01 Komatsu Ltd Production of corrosion-and wear-resistant sliding material
JPS6224916A (en) * 1985-07-22 1987-02-02 Masahiko Suzuki Formation of outer surface layer by electric discharge machining with use of melalloid electrode
JP2781215B2 (en) 1989-08-07 1998-07-30 電気化学工業株式会社 Electrodes for Die-sinker EDM
JP3093846B2 (en) 1991-11-18 2000-10-03 科学技術振興事業団 Surface treatment method for metal materials
JP3193475B2 (en) 1992-07-31 2001-07-30 石福金属興業株式会社 Electric discharge coating method and electric discharge coating electrode used for carrying out the method
JP3002621B2 (en) * 1993-10-15 2000-01-24 尚武 毛利 Surface treatment method and apparatus by electric discharge machining
JP3271844B2 (en) 1993-12-31 2002-04-08 科学技術振興事業団 Surface treatment method for metallic materials by submerged discharge
JPH07301103A (en) 1994-05-06 1995-11-14 Ishikawajima Harima Heavy Ind Co Ltd Swirl promoting device for air passing labyrinth seal
JPH0881756A (en) 1994-09-14 1996-03-26 Yoshizawa L Ee Kk Surface treated work
JP3303642B2 (en) 1995-03-30 2002-07-22 三菱自動車工業株式会社 Heat storage type heat exchanger, heat-resistant sliding body used for the heat exchanger, etc.
JPH08319804A (en) 1995-05-24 1996-12-03 Toshiba Corp Labyrinth seal device
JP3537939B2 (en) * 1996-01-17 2004-06-14 独立行政法人 科学技術振興機構 Surface treatment by submerged discharge
US5952110A (en) * 1996-12-24 1999-09-14 General Electric Company Abrasive ceramic matrix turbine blade tip and method for forming
WO1999046424A1 (en) * 1998-03-11 1999-09-16 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Compact electrode for discharge surface treatment
DE19882915T1 (en) * 1998-03-16 2001-04-26 Mitsubishi Electric Corp Treatment method by means of electrical discharge and device and electrode for performing the method
JPH11286768A (en) 1998-04-02 1999-10-19 Ishikawajima Harima Heavy Ind Co Ltd Wear resistant coating material and wear resistant-coating method
CN1104299C (en) * 1998-05-13 2003-04-02 三菱电机株式会社 Method and device for treating tool surface
CN1087991C (en) * 1998-05-13 2002-07-24 三菱电机株式会社 Electrode of green compact for discharge surface treatment, method of producing the same, method and apparatus for discharge surface treatment and green compact for discharge surface treatment
JP3627088B2 (en) 1998-05-13 2005-03-09 三菱電機株式会社 Discharge surface treatment method and object to be processed formed by the method
DE19883021B4 (en) 1998-11-13 2006-02-02 Mitsubishi Denki K.K. Apparatus for discharge surface treatment comprises a number of electrodes insulated electrically from each other, and connected to a power supply
JP3907948B2 (en) * 1998-11-13 2007-04-18 三菱電機株式会社 Mold discharge surface treatment method, mold discharge surface treatment electrode manufacturing method, and mold discharge surface treatment electrode
CN1094407C (en) * 1998-11-13 2002-11-20 三菱电机株式会社 Discharge surface treating method and discharge electrode for discharge surface treamtent
JP2000345367A (en) * 1999-05-31 2000-12-12 Nissan Motor Co Ltd Discharge surface treating method for gear
JP2000345809A (en) 1999-06-02 2000-12-12 Ishikawajima Harima Heavy Ind Co Ltd Gas turbine engine
US6935917B1 (en) * 1999-07-16 2005-08-30 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Discharge surface treating electrode and production method thereof
CH693955A5 (en) * 1999-09-30 2004-05-14 Mitsubishi Electric Corp Electric discharge surface treatment electrode production involves mixing tungsten carbide powder with tungsten powder and charging the mixture in a press die for compression molding
JP4410357B2 (en) 1999-11-30 2010-02-03 三菱重工業株式会社 Method for coating shroud contact surface and blade with shroud
JP4595160B2 (en) 2000-01-25 2010-12-08 東亞合成株式会社 Active energy ray curable coating agent to prevent sticking on the back of thermal transfer film
JP2001279465A (en) 2000-03-29 2001-10-10 Mitsubishi Electric Corp Surface discharge treating method, electrode for surface treatment used therefor and obtained surface treated film
US20020147521A1 (en) * 2001-03-14 2002-10-10 Milling Systems And Concepts Pte Ltd. Prototype production system and method
CA2366325A1 (en) * 2001-12-27 2003-06-27 Todd Howley Method of forming turbine blade root
JP4164512B2 (en) * 2006-03-15 2008-10-15 株式会社日本製鋼所 Control method of injection molding machine

Patent Citations (119)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2964420A (en) * 1955-06-14 1960-12-13 Union Carbide Corp Refractory coated body
US3197861A (en) * 1960-06-01 1965-08-03 Continental Can Co Production of non-porous vacuum metallized coatings on strip material
US3444059A (en) * 1966-06-27 1969-05-13 Syntex Corp Electrolytic reduction of cyclopentanophenanthrene derivatives
US3444058A (en) * 1967-01-16 1969-05-13 Union Carbide Corp Electrodeposition of refractory metals
US3552479A (en) * 1967-11-22 1971-01-05 Martin Metals Co Casting process involving cooling of a shell mold prior to casting metal therein
US3660882A (en) * 1969-04-28 1972-05-09 Boehler & Co Ag Geb Process for the production of turbine blades
US3778586A (en) * 1970-04-02 1973-12-11 Composite Sciences Process for coating metals using resistance heating of preformed layer
US3754899A (en) * 1970-12-14 1973-08-28 J Kanter Austenitic alloy containing boron and processes for manufacturing thesame
US4049428A (en) * 1971-03-25 1977-09-20 Union Carbide Corporation Metal porous abradable seal
US3853602A (en) * 1971-12-03 1974-12-10 Nippon Piston Ring Co Ltd Sliding member
US3961910A (en) * 1973-05-25 1976-06-08 Chromalloy American Corporation Rhodium-containing superalloy coatings and methods of making same
US3890456A (en) * 1973-08-06 1975-06-17 United Aircraft Corp Process of coating a gas turbine engine alloy substrate
US4124737A (en) * 1976-12-30 1978-11-07 Union Carbide Corporation High temperature wear resistant coating composition
US4193852A (en) * 1977-06-14 1980-03-18 Inoue-Japax Research Incorporated Method and apparatus for electrical machining with a multi-guided travelling electrode
US4414249A (en) * 1980-01-07 1983-11-08 United Technologies Corporation Method for producing metallic articles having durable ceramic thermal barrier coatings
US4520087A (en) * 1982-03-05 1985-05-28 Kabushiki Kaisha Daini Seikosha Divalent silver oxide cell including cadmium and tellunium
US4744725A (en) * 1984-06-25 1988-05-17 United Technologies Corporation Abrasive surfaced article for high temperature service
US5024884A (en) * 1984-12-24 1991-06-18 United Technologies Corporation Abradable seal having particulate erosion resistance
US4797527A (en) * 1985-02-06 1989-01-10 Kanegafuchi Kagaku Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Electrode for electric discharge machining and method for producing the same
US4818388A (en) * 1986-12-09 1989-04-04 Taikisha Ltd. Paint waste separating and collecting apparatus
US4828934A (en) * 1986-12-12 1989-05-09 Vapor Technologies, Inc. Method of protecting ceramic bodies against mechanical and thermal action
US4735656A (en) * 1986-12-29 1988-04-05 United Technologies Corporation Abrasive material, especially for turbine blade tips
US4802828A (en) * 1986-12-29 1989-02-07 United Technologies Corporation Turbine blade having a fused metal-ceramic tip
US4735678A (en) * 1987-04-13 1988-04-05 Olin Corporation Forming a circuit pattern in a metallic tape by electrical discharge machining
US4884820A (en) * 1987-05-19 1989-12-05 Union Carbide Corporation Wear resistant, abrasive laser-engraved ceramic or metallic carbide surfaces for rotary labyrinth seal members
US4851188A (en) * 1987-12-21 1989-07-25 United Technologies Corporation Method for making a turbine blade having a wear resistant layer sintered to the blade tip surface
US4878953A (en) * 1988-01-13 1989-11-07 Metallurgical Industries, Inc. Method of refurbishing cast gas turbine engine components and refurbished component
US5108555A (en) * 1989-06-07 1992-04-28 Cusp Dental Supply Co., Ltd. Electrode for electrical discharge machining and process for manufacturing the same
US5074970A (en) * 1989-07-03 1991-12-24 Kostas Routsis Method for applying an abrasive layer to titanium alloy compressor airfoils
US5304288A (en) * 1990-08-08 1994-04-19 U.S. Philips Corporation Method of and device for the spark erosion of hardmeal objects
US5231270A (en) * 1990-10-02 1993-07-27 Berkenhoff Gmbh Wire electrode
US5134032A (en) * 1991-02-25 1992-07-28 General Electric Company Abrasive particle and rotary seal therewith
US5906896A (en) * 1991-07-12 1999-05-25 Praxair S.T. Technology, Inc. Rotary seal member coated with a chromium carbide-age hardenable nickel base alloy
US5314304A (en) * 1991-08-15 1994-05-24 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Air Force Abradeable labyrinth stator seal
US5264011A (en) * 1992-09-08 1993-11-23 General Motors Corporation Abrasive blade tips for cast single crystal gas turbine blades
US5476363A (en) * 1993-10-15 1995-12-19 Charles E. Sohl Method and apparatus for reducing stress on the tips of turbine or compressor blades
US5603603A (en) * 1993-12-08 1997-02-18 United Technologies Corporation Abrasive blade tip
US5485890A (en) * 1994-06-14 1996-01-23 Smith International, Inc. Rock bit
EP0705911A1 (en) * 1994-10-04 1996-04-10 General Electric Company Thermal barrier coating
US5637239A (en) * 1995-03-31 1997-06-10 United Technologies Corporation Curved electrode and method for electrical discharge machining curved cooling holes
US5851678A (en) * 1995-04-06 1998-12-22 General Electric Company Composite thermal barrier coating with impermeable coating
US5858479A (en) * 1996-01-17 1999-01-12 Japan Science And Technology Corporation Surface treating method by electric discharge
US5897966A (en) * 1996-02-26 1999-04-27 General Electric Company High temperature alloy article with a discrete protective coating and method for making
US5837957A (en) * 1996-02-27 1998-11-17 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electric discharge machining apparatus
US5804789A (en) * 1996-06-12 1998-09-08 Japan Science And Technology Corporation Surface treating method and apparatus by electric discharge machining
US5866518A (en) * 1997-01-16 1999-02-02 The United States Of America As Represented By The Administrator Of The National Aeronautics And Space Administration Self-lubricating composite containing chromium oxide
US6086684A (en) * 1997-06-04 2000-07-11 Japan Science And Technology Corporation Electric discharge surface treating method and apparatus
US6214475B1 (en) * 1997-10-02 2001-04-10 Daimler-Benz Ag Thermal insulating layer for a metallic component and its process of manufacture
US5935407A (en) * 1997-11-06 1999-08-10 Chromalloy Gas Turbine Corporation Method for producing abrasive tips for gas turbine blades
US6194086B1 (en) * 1997-11-06 2001-02-27 Chromalloy Gas Turbine Corporation Method for producing abrasive tips for gas turbine blades
US6190124B1 (en) * 1997-11-26 2001-02-20 United Technologies Corporation Columnar zirconium oxide abrasive coating for a gas turbine engine seal system
US6314778B1 (en) * 1998-03-18 2001-11-13 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Rolling die and surface processing method for rolling die
US6783795B2 (en) * 1998-05-08 2004-08-31 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Power supply apparatus for discharge surface treatment
US6602561B1 (en) * 1998-05-13 2003-08-05 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electrode for discharge surface treatment and manufacturing method therefor and discharge surface treatment method and device
US5972424A (en) * 1998-05-21 1999-10-26 United Technologies Corporation Repair of gas turbine engine component coated with a thermal barrier coating
US6358002B1 (en) * 1998-06-18 2002-03-19 United Technologies Corporation Article having durable ceramic coating with localized abradable portion
US6821579B2 (en) * 1998-11-13 2004-11-23 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Surface treatment method using electric discharge, and an electrode for the surface treatment method
US6221181B1 (en) * 1999-06-02 2001-04-24 Abb Research Ltd. Coating composition for high temperature protection
US6274201B1 (en) * 1999-08-30 2001-08-14 General Electric Company Protective coatings for metal-based substrates, and related processes
US20060021868A1 (en) * 1999-09-30 2006-02-02 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electrode for discharge surface treatment, a method of manufacturing the electrode for discharge surface treatment, and a discharge surface treatment method
US6311576B1 (en) * 1999-10-04 2001-11-06 Techmetric Inc. Anti-backlash nut for lead screw
US20010009247A1 (en) * 2000-01-20 2001-07-26 Brooks William C. Method of removing a thermal barrier coating
US6676741B2 (en) * 2000-03-31 2004-01-13 Flex Products, Inc. Methods for producing enhanced interference pigments
US6588103B2 (en) * 2000-04-03 2003-07-08 Alstom (Switzerland) Ltd Tip material for a turbine blade and method of manufacturing or repairing a tip of a turbine blade
US6811379B2 (en) * 2000-04-03 2004-11-02 Alstom Technology Ltd Tip material for a turbine blade and method of manufacturing or repairing a tip of a turbine blade
WO2001083851A1 (en) * 2000-04-27 2001-11-08 Standard Aero Limited Multilayer thermal barrier coatings
US6434823B1 (en) * 2000-10-10 2002-08-20 General Electric Company Method for repairing a coated article
US6511762B1 (en) * 2000-11-06 2003-01-28 General Electric Company Multi-layer thermal barrier coating with transpiration cooling
US20040096318A1 (en) * 2001-02-28 2004-05-20 Minoru Ohara Combustion engine, gas turbine, and polishing layer
US20020136613A1 (en) * 2001-03-21 2002-09-26 Artran, Inc. Rotary actuator for precision applications
US20020141868A1 (en) * 2001-03-27 2002-10-03 Ching-Pang Lee Cooled thermal barrier coating on a turbine blade tip
US20040091627A1 (en) * 2001-05-31 2004-05-13 Minoru Ohara Coating forming method and coating forming material, and abbrasive coating forming sheet
US6532656B1 (en) * 2001-10-10 2003-03-18 General Electric Company Gas turbine engine compressor blade restoration method
US20040022949A1 (en) * 2002-02-14 2004-02-05 Kazuhiro Hasezaki Abradable coating and method for forming same
US20050211165A1 (en) * 2002-07-30 2005-09-29 Akihiro Goto Electrode for electric discharge surface treatment, electric discharge surface treatment method and electric discharge surface treatment apparatus
US7537808B2 (en) * 2002-07-30 2009-05-26 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electrode for electric discharge surface treatment, electric discharge surface treatment method and electric discharge surface treatment apparatus
US20060035068A1 (en) * 2002-09-24 2006-02-16 Ishikawajima-Harima Heavy Industries Co., Ltd. Method for coating sliding surface of high-temperature member, high-temperature member and electrode for electro-discharge surface treatment
US20100086398A1 (en) * 2002-09-24 2010-04-08 Ihi Corporation Method for coating sliding surface of high-temperature member, high-temperature member and electrode for electro-discharge surface treatment
US20040067317A1 (en) * 2002-10-03 2004-04-08 The General Electric Company Application method for abradable material
US7918460B2 (en) * 2002-10-09 2011-04-05 Ihi Corporation Rotating member and method for coating the same
US20050063827A1 (en) * 2002-10-09 2005-03-24 Ishikawajima-Harima Heavy Industries Co., Ltd. Rotating member and method for coating the same
US20050003172A1 (en) * 2002-12-17 2005-01-06 General Electric Company 7FAstage 1 abradable coatings and method for making same
US7834291B2 (en) * 2003-05-29 2010-11-16 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electrode for electric discharge surface treatment, and method and apparatus for electric discharge surface treatment
US20070068793A1 (en) * 2003-05-29 2007-03-29 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electrode for discharge surface treatment, manufacturing method for electrode for discharge surface treatment, discharge surface treatment apparatus, and discharge surface treatment method
US20060118402A1 (en) * 2003-05-29 2006-06-08 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electrode for electric discharge surface treatment, and method and apparatus for electric discharge surface treatment
US20060213777A1 (en) * 2003-06-04 2006-09-28 Akihiro Goto Discharge surface treatment method and discharge surface treatment apparatus
US7915559B2 (en) * 2003-06-04 2011-03-29 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electrode for electric discharge surface treatment, method for manufacturing electrode, and method for storing electrode
US20060078738A1 (en) * 2003-06-04 2006-04-13 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Coating formed on base metal surface, heat-resistant machinery part, nozzle for processing machine, contact tip for welding, method of forming coating, method of manufacturing heat-resistant machinery part, method of manufacturing nozzle for processing machine, and method of manufacturing contact tip for welding
US20100180725A1 (en) * 2003-06-05 2010-07-22 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electrode for discharge surface treatment, manufacturing method and evaluation method for electrode for discharge surface treatment, discharge surface treatment apparatus, and discharge surface treatment method
US7910176B2 (en) * 2003-06-05 2011-03-22 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electrode for discharge surface treatment, manufacturing method and evaluation method for electrode for discharge surface treatment, discharge surface treatment apparatus, and discharge surface treatment method
US20110027099A1 (en) * 2003-06-10 2011-02-03 Ishikawajima-Harima Heavy Industries Co., Ltd. Metal component, turbine component, gas turbine engine, surface processing method, and steam turbine engine
US20060086695A1 (en) * 2003-06-10 2006-04-27 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electrode for discharge surface treatment and method of evaluating the same, and discharge-surface-treating method
US20070184298A1 (en) * 2003-06-10 2007-08-09 Hiroyuki Ochiai Turbine component, gas turbine engine, method for manufacturing turbine component, surface processing method, vane component, metal component, and steam turbine engine
US20070104585A1 (en) * 2003-06-10 2007-05-10 Ishikawajima-Harima Heavy Industries Co., Ltd. Metal component, turbine component, gas turbine engine, surface processing method, and steam turbine engine
US7776409B2 (en) * 2003-06-10 2010-08-17 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electrode for discharge surface treatment and method of evaluating the same, and discharge-surface-treating method
US20080230374A1 (en) * 2003-06-11 2008-09-25 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electrical-discharge surface-treatment method
US20060086617A1 (en) * 2003-06-11 2006-04-27 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electrical-discharge surface-treatment method
US20060280597A1 (en) * 2003-06-11 2006-12-14 Ishikawajima-Harima Heavy Industries Co., Ltd. Rotating member, housing, bearing, gearbox, rotating machine, shaft structure, and surface treatment method
US20060090997A1 (en) * 2003-06-11 2006-05-04 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Discharge surface-treatment method and discharge surface-treatment apparatus
US7691454B2 (en) * 2003-06-11 2010-04-06 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electrical-discharge surface-treatment method using a metallic powder or metallic powder compound in combination with other elements as electrode
US20060240184A1 (en) * 2003-06-11 2006-10-26 Hiroyuki Ochiai Method for repairing machine part, method for forming restored machine part, method for manufacturing machine part, gas turbine engine, electric discharge machine, method for repairing turbine component, and method for forming restored turbine component
US7723636B2 (en) * 2003-06-11 2010-05-25 Ishikawajima-Harima Heavy Industries Co., Ltd. Method for repairing machine part, method for forming restored machine part, method for manufacturing machine part, gas turbine engine, electric discharge machine, method for repairing turbine component, and method for forming restored turbine component
US20050011593A1 (en) * 2003-07-15 2005-01-20 General Electric Company Process for a beta-phase nickel aluminide overlay coating
US7509736B2 (en) * 2003-10-10 2009-03-31 Snecma Process for repairing metallic pieces especially turbine blades of a gas turbine motor
US20050129511A1 (en) * 2003-12-11 2005-06-16 Siemens Westinghouse Power Corporation Turbine blade tip with optimized abrasive
US20070160469A1 (en) * 2004-01-14 2007-07-12 Ishikawajima-Harima Heavy Industries Co., Ltd. Compressor, titanium-made rotor blade, jet engine and titanium-made rotor blade producing method
US20090214352A1 (en) * 2005-03-09 2009-08-27 Ihi Corporation Surface treatment method and repair method
US7763349B2 (en) * 2005-03-15 2010-07-27 Ihi Corporation Protective coating and metal structure
US20100239841A1 (en) * 2005-03-15 2010-09-23 Ihi Corporation Protective coating and metal structure
US20080066646A1 (en) * 2005-03-15 2008-03-20 Ihi Corporation Protective coating and metal structure
US8287968B2 (en) * 2006-04-05 2012-10-16 Mitsubishi Electric Corporation Coating film and coating-film forming method
US20100119864A1 (en) * 2007-03-26 2010-05-13 Ihi Corporation Heat-resistant component
US20100126871A1 (en) * 2007-03-30 2010-05-27 Ihi Corporation Discharging surface preparation method and repairing method
US20080304975A1 (en) * 2007-06-05 2008-12-11 Rolls-Royce Plc Method for producing abrasive tips for gas turbine blades
US20100200548A1 (en) * 2007-07-18 2010-08-12 Ihi Corporation Fabrication method of electrode for spark surface modification, and spark surface modification electrode
US20100330302A1 (en) * 2008-01-30 2010-12-30 Ihi Corporation Discharge surface treatment method and coating block for discharge surface treatments
US20090288809A1 (en) * 2008-05-20 2009-11-26 Mitsubishi Electric Corporation Method of manufacturing electrical discharge surface treatment-purpose electrode and electrical discharge surface treatment-purpose electrode
US20110135845A1 (en) * 2008-08-06 2011-06-09 Akihiro Goto Electrical discharge surface treatment method
US20110300311A1 (en) * 2009-02-18 2011-12-08 Ihi Corporation Production method of electrode and discharge surface treatment therewith

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US9359682B2 (en) 2009-07-28 2016-06-07 Mitsubishi Electric Corporation Erosion resistant machine component, method for forming surface layer of machine component, and method for manufacturing steam turbine
US9382801B2 (en) 2014-02-26 2016-07-05 General Electric Company Method for removing a rotor bucket from a turbomachine rotor wheel
DE102015217670A1 (en) * 2015-09-15 2017-03-16 Rolls-Royce Deutschland Ltd & Co Kg Sealing element, sealing system with a sealing element, turbomachine with a sealing system and method for producing a sealing element
US9969021B2 (en) * 2015-11-27 2018-05-15 Intai Technology Corp. Electrochemical machining apparatus for forming turbine blades

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US7918460B2 (en) 2011-04-05
CA2483528C (en) 2015-07-21
CA2483528A1 (en) 2004-04-22
US7537809B2 (en) 2009-05-26
KR20050058995A (en) 2005-06-17
WO2004033755A1 (en) 2004-04-22
EP1550741A4 (en) 2011-05-25
US20050063827A1 (en) 2005-03-24
US20090200748A1 (en) 2009-08-13
TW200408488A (en) 2004-06-01
CN1692179B (en) 2011-07-13
TWI272993B (en) 2007-02-11
KR101004236B1 (en) 2010-12-24
EP1550741A1 (en) 2005-07-06
CN1692179A (en) 2005-11-02

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US7918460B2 (en) Rotating member and method for coating the same
US6609894B2 (en) Airfoils with improved oxidation resistance and manufacture and repair thereof
US7824159B2 (en) Compressor, titanium-made rotor blade, jet engine and titanium-made rotor blade producing method
JP6340010B2 (en) Seal system for use in a turbomachine and method of making the same
US20120114956A1 (en) Turbine component, gas turbine engine, production method of turbine component, surface treatment method thereof, blade component, metal component and steam turbine engine
EP1544321B1 (en) Method for coating sliding surface of high temperature member
US20060222776A1 (en) Environment-resistant platinum aluminide coatings, and methods of applying the same onto turbine components
US9243503B2 (en) Components with microchannel cooled platforms and fillets and methods of manufacture
WO2006075994A2 (en) Cold gas-dynamic spraying of wear resistant alloys on turbine blades
US9238265B2 (en) Backstrike protection during machining of cooling features
JPWO2008117802A1 (en) Heat resistant parts
JPH02104904A (en) Clearance control mechanism of turbine blade nose
JP6216570B2 (en) Component with cooling channel and manufacturing method
US9278462B2 (en) Backstrike protection during machining of cooling features
EP3034809B1 (en) Gas turbine engine component with abrasive surface formed by electrical discharge machining
JP3864458B2 (en) Method for forming wear-resistant layer on tip of turbine blade
JP2004150272A (en) Moving blade and coating method therefor
JP4305928B2 (en) Rotating body and coating method thereof
RU2320776C2 (en) Rotating member and method for depositing of coating onto the same
US11814979B1 (en) Systems and methods of hybrid blade tip repair
US9242294B2 (en) Methods of forming cooling channels using backstrike protection
US20210178475A1 (en) Abrasive coating including metal matrix and ceramic particles

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AS Assignment

Owner name: IHI CORPORATION, JAPAN

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:MITSUBISHI DENKI KABUSHIKI KAISHA;REEL/FRAME:029914/0926

Effective date: 20130228

STCB Information on status: application discontinuation

Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO RESPOND TO AN OFFICE ACTION