Outline Curriculum (5 lectures) Each lecture ? 45 minutes - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Outline Curriculum (5 lectures) Each lecture ? 45 minutes

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Outline Curriculum (5 lectures) Each lecture 45 minutes Lecture 1: An introduction in electrochemical coating Lecture 2: Electrodeposition of coating – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Outline Curriculum (5 lectures) Each lecture ? 45 minutes


1
Outline Curriculum (5 lectures)Each lecture ? 45
minutes
  • Lecture 1 An introduction in electrochemical
    coating
  • Lecture 2 Electrodeposition of coating
  • Lecture 3 Anodizing of valve metal
  • Lecture 4 Electroless deposition of coating
  • Lecture 5 Revision in electrochemical coating

2
Lecture 4 of 5Electroless Deposition of Coating
3
Electroless deposition
  • Involves the oxidation of a soluble reducing
    agent which supports the cathodic deposition of
    metal on a catalytic surface
  • Electroless deposition this process uses only
    one electrode and no external source of electric
    current.
  • Electroless deposition the solution needs to
    contain a reducing agent so that the reaction can
    proceed
  • Metal ion Reduction solution

Catalytic surface
Metal solid oxidation solution
4
Typical thickness vs. time profiles
Deposit thickness
Electroplating
Electroless deposition
Immersion deposition (thin, porous deposits?)
0
0
Time
5
Types of Metal Deposition
  • Electroless deposition
  • E.g., nickel deposits. open-circuit using a
    reducing agent
  • Electroplating
  • E,g, nickel deposited at cathode using external
  • d.c. power supply
  • Immersion deposition
  • E.g., steel nail in copper sulfate, open-circuit,
    displaces copper metal from solution onto nail

6
Immersion deposition
  • A displacement reaction occurs on the surface of
    the anode.
  • The work piece (anode) dissolves to metal ions.
    Metal ions in solution deposits at the cathode,
    in the absence of an external power source.
  • This is a spontaneous reaction, driven by the
    electrode potential of the reaction.

Cu2 2e ? Cu E 0.337 V vs. SHE Fe2 2e
? Fe E ? 0.440 V vs. SHE Overall
reaction Cu2 Fe ? Fe2 Cu Ecell Ecathode ?
Eanode 0.737 V
anode
cathode
Fe
Cu
Fe2
Cu2
Cu
7
Limitation of immersion deposition
  • The deposits properties are difficult to control
    and the deposit may be porous and poorly
    adherent.
  • The rate of deposition declines with time and
    ceases when the steel surface is completely
    covered with copper.
  • Hence, electroless deposition of metal is more
    favourable. But, the surface needs to be
    catalytically activated in order for the metal
    deposits to form.

8
What is the Job of the Bath?
  • Provides an electrolyte
  • to conduct electricity, ionically
  • Provides a source of the metal to be plated
  • as dissolved metal salts leading to metal ions
  • Contains a reducing agent
  • To reduce metal ions to metal
  • Wets the cathode work-piece
  • allowing good adhesion to take place
  • Helps to stabilise temperature
  • acts as a heating/cooling bath

9
Typically, What is in a Bath?E.g., Electroless
Ni-P
  • Ions of the metal to be plated, e.g.
  • Ni2 (nickel ions) added as the chloride
  • Conductive electrolyte
  • NiCl2, H2PO2-, CH3COO-
  • Complexant
  • Acetate, succinate
  • Reducing agent
  • Hypophosphite ion H2PO2-
  • Additives
  • Wetters, stabilisers, exhaltants, levellers,
    brightners, stress modifiers
  • Other examples of reducing agents
  • Formaldehyde
  • Hypophosphorus acid
  • Alkaline borohydrides
  • Alkaline diboranes

10
Typical Recipe and ConditionsAcid Ni-P
  • Component Concentration/g L-1
  • Nickel chloride 20
  • Sodium hypophosphite 20
  • Sodium acetate 10
  • Sodium succinate 15
  • Temperature 90 C
  • pH 4.5

11
Which Common Metals are Electroless Deposited?
  • Copper
  • - for e- conductive printed circuit tracks
  • Nickel-Phosphorus (3-15wt P)
  • - for corrosion resistance on, e.g., steel or
    Al
  • Ni-P PTFE particles
  • - for self-lubricating/anti-stick coatings
  • Ni-P SiC particles
  • - for wear resistance

12
The Electrochemical reactions
  • An open-circuit, redox process taking place
    spontaneously on a single autocatalytic
    substrate.
  • Cathodic Ni2 2e- Ni
  • Anodic H2PO2- H2O - 2e- H2PO3- 2H
  • hypophosphite ion orthophosphite ion
  • Overall Ni2 H2PO2- H2O H2PO3- 2H

Spontaneous reaction DGo ? 48 kJ mol-1
13
Gibbs free energy change, ?Gcell
  • ?Gcell ? n F Ecell

?Gcell gt 0 , no spontaneous reaction
?Gcell lt 0 , spontaneous reaction
n number of electrons F Faradays constant,
96485 C mol-1 Ecell Ecathode ? Eanode
14
Hydrogen Embrittlement
  • To describe the presence of hydrogen in metal
    deposit.
  • In electroless deposition or electroplating, H
    atom or H2 molecules could be entrapped or
    absorbed into the metal deposits.
  • Induces a high physical stress in the coating.
  • .
  • Coatings may delaminate from the substrate or
    crack.
  • Reduce the mechanical properties of coating.

15
Some important characteristics for electroless
deposition
  • The substrate metal and the deposited metal must
    support the electrode processes in a catalytic
    manner.
  • The process must be operated so as to avoid
    spontaneous decomposition of the electrolyte or
    onto the tank surfaces.
  • A pH decrease accompanies the overall process.
  • The reducing agent depletes its oxidation
    product accumulates.
  • The source of metal, e.g. Ni2 declines in
    concentration.
  • In practice, the deposit is usually an ally, e.g.
    Ni-P, showing that the previous reactions are
    oversimplified.

16
Porosity in electroless Ni-P deposits (lt5 mm) on
mild steel
60 mm
2 mm
SEM image showing a branched network pore
Optical micrograph showing a pore which reveals
the steel substrate
17
Log-log Porosity vs. thickness for electroless
Ni-P deposits on steel
18
Properties of Electroless Deposition
  • Must have an autocatalytic substrate
  • To allow deposition to initiate and continue
  • Constant deposition rate with time
  • Typically 10-15 micron per hour
  • Uniform deposit thickness
  • Even on complex shapes
  • Baths require good analytical control
  • To maintain deposit thickness and composition
  • Baths have a short lifetime
  • Can be lt 5 metal turnovers
  • Spontaneous decomposition can occur bombing
    out

19
Applications of Electroless Deposition include
  • Printed circuits and resistors
  • Temperature sensors
  • Valves for fluid handling
  • Moulds for plastic and glass
  • Gears, crankshafts and hydraulic cylinders
  • Magnetic tapes
  • Coatings on aluminium (to enable this metal to be
    soldered)
  • Corrosion-resistant coatings for components or
    structures exposed to atmospheres or
    immersed in fresh or sea water
  • Plating on plastics, e.g., car door handles and
    marine hardware

20
More application of electroless deposition
  • Oil Gas
  • Valve components, such as Balls, Gates, Plugs
    etc. And other components such as pumps, pipe
    fittings, packers, barrels etc.
  • Chemical Processing
  • Heat Exchangers, Filter Units, pump housing and
    impellers, mixing blades etc.
  • Plastics
  • Molds and dies for injecting and low and blow
    molding of plastics components, extruders,
    machine parts rollers etc.
  • Textile
  • Printing cylinders, machine parts, spinneret's,
    threaded guides
  • Automotive
  • Shock Absorbers, heat sinks, gears, cylinders,
    brake pistons etc.
  • Aviation Aerospace Satellite and rocket
    components, rams pistons, valve components etc.
  • Food pharmaceutical Capsule machinery dies,
    chocolates molds, food processing machinery
    components etc.

21
Summary
  • Electroless deposition provides important,
    speciality
  • (e.g., Ni-P based) coatings on steel or aluminium
    or
  • Cu printed circuit board tracks
  • High degree of control over deposit thickness
  • By controlling bath chemistry, temperature and
    time.
  • The process requires no external current
  • But is more expensive than electroplating
  • The substrate must be made autocatalytic
  • For deposition to start and continue
  • The throwing power is very good
  • uniform coatings, even on screw threads
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