

Author: Gil L. Staia M. H. Guevara R. Puchi-Cabrera E. S. Lewis D. B.
Publisher: Maney Publishing
ISSN: 1743-2944
Source: Surface Engineering, Vol.22, Iss.4, 2006-08, pp. : 304-313
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Abstract
Nickel based self-fluxing thermal sprayed alloys have been used in many applications to protect machinery parts against wear and corrosion. Although the mechanical and chemical properties of nickel based self-fluxing coatings are well known, the constituents of the microstructure have not been fully analysed. In the present work, the coatings were thermal sprayed on a 1020 steel substrate using a JP-5000 gun. Scanning electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy techniques were employed for microstructural characterisation of the coatings, as complementary techniques to the X-ray diffraction studies already published by the authors. It has been determined that the as sprayed coatings are formed by a multiphase structure with an inhomogeneous distribution of soluble elements in an FCC
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