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Publication | Open Access

Molten‐Volcanic‐Ash‐Phobic Thermal Barrier Coating based on Biomimetic Structure

96

Citations

42

References

2023

Year

Abstract

Volcanic ash is a major threat to aviation safety. The softening/melting temperatures of volcanic ash lie far below typical aero-engine operating temperatures. Thus, molten ash can accelerate the failure of thermal barrier coatings (TBCs). Here, inspired by natural superhydrophobic surfaces (e.g., the lotus leaf), a molten-volcanic-ash-phobic TBC, which provides a large possibility to eliminate molten ash issues of TBCs, is developed. A hierarchically structured surface is first prepared on a (Gd<sub>0.9</sub> Yb<sub>0.1</sub> )<sub>2</sub> Zr<sub>2</sub> O<sub>7</sub> (GYbZ) pellet by ultrafast laser direct writing technology, aiming to confirm the feasibility of the biomimetic microstructure to repel molten volcanic ash wetting. Then biomimetic-structured GYbZ TBCs are successfully fabricated using plasma spray physical vapor deposition, which reveals "silicate" phobicity at high temperatures. The exciting molten-volcanic-ash-phobic attribute of the designed surfaces is attributed to the lotus-leaf-like dual-scale microstructure, emulating in particular the existence of nanoparticles. These findings may be an important step toward the development of next-generation aviation engines with greatly reduced vulnerability to environmental siliceous debris.

References

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