2 research outputs found

    Computational simulation of liquid-fuelled HVOF thermal spraying

    No full text
    Liquid-fuelled high-velocity oxygen–fuel (HVOF) thermal spraying systems are gaining more attentions due to their advantage of producing denser coatings in comparison to their gas-fuelled counterparts. The flow through a HVOF gun is characterized by a complex array of thermodynamic phenomena involving combustion, turbulence and compressible flow. Advanced computational models have been developed to gain insight to the thermochemical processes of thermal spraying, however little work has been reported for the liquid-fuelled systems. This investigation employs a commercial finite volume CFD code to simulate the flow field through the most widely used liquid-fuel HVOF gun, JP5000 (Praxair, US). By combining numerical combustion and discrete phase models the turbulent spray flame is captured and the development of supersonic gas flow is revealed. The flow field is thoroughly examined by adjusting the nozzle throat diameter and combustion chamber size. The influence of fuel droplet size on the flame shame shape and combusting gas flow is also examined.<br/

    Numerical investigations of thermal spray coating processes: combustion, supersonic flow, droplet injection, and substrate impingement phenomena

    No full text
    The aim of this thesis is to apply CFD methods to investigate the system characteristics of high speed thermal spray coating processes in order facilitate technological development. Supersonic flow phenomena, combustion, discrete droplet and particle migration with heating, phase change and disintegration, and particle impingement phenomena at the substrate are studied. Each published set of results provide an individual understanding of the underlying physics which control different aspects of thermal spray systems.A wide range of parametric studies have been carried out for HVOF, warm spray, and cold spay systems in order to build a better understanding of process design requirements. These parameters include: nozzle cross-section shape, particle size, processing gas type, nozzle throat diameter, and combustion chamber size. Detailed descriptions of the gas phase characteristics through liquid fuelled HVOF, warm spray, and cold spray systems are built and the interrelations between the gas and powder particle phases are discussed. A further study looks in detail at the disintegration of discrete phase water droplets, providing a new insight to the mechanisms which control droplet disintegration, and serves as a fundamental reference for future developments of liquid feedstock devices.In parallel with these gas-particle-droplet simulations, the impingement of molten and semi-molten powder droplets at the substrate is investigated and the models applied simulate the impingement, spreading and solidification. The results obtained shed light on the break-up phenomena on impact and describe in detail how the solidification process varies with an increasing impact velocity. The results obtained also visually describe the freezing induced break-up phenomenon at the splat periphery
    corecore