Abstract

Micro-structured surface functional materials were widely used in electronics, batteries, solar cells, and many other products. However, oxidation at high temperatures greatly affects the material service life and performance. This study focuses on the oxide layer characteristics after high-temperature oxidation and the thermal emissivity of metal materials with micro-structured surfaces. Micro-structured surfaces with various groove morphologies were prepared on 99.9% purity nickel samples. The high-temperature oxidation characteristics of the nickel samples with the microstructure surfaces and the total hemispherical emissivities were measured after various oxidation times in high-temperature (1173 K) air to characterize the correlations between the micro-structure surface oxidization and the emissivity at elevated temperatures. The initial surface roughness greatly affects the surface roughness after oxidation with the oxidation increasing the surface roughness on smooth or less rough surfaces but making the surface smoother for very rough surfaces. The oxidation results show that rougher initial surfaces have larger oxide grain sizes with longer oxidation times leading to smaller grain sizes. The measured total hemispherical emissivity increased with the temperature (500–1400 K) and the oxide layer thickness. The experiments further illustrates that, for the same oxide layer thickness, the measured emissivities become larger for oxides with larger grain sizes caused by the rougher original surfaces. This analysis provides an understanding of the oxidation kinetics of microstructured surfaces and how the oxidized microstructure surfaces affect the thermal radiation properties.

Highlights

  • Mechanical equipment is often operated in high-temperature environments

  • The high-temperature oxidation characteristics surface emissivities of nickel samples were investigated for various surface microstructures for various temperatures and oxidation times

  • The results show that rougher initial surfaces of the un-oxidized samples resulted in rougher sample surfaces after oxidation at high temperatures

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Summary

Introduction

Mechanical equipment is often operated in high-temperature environments. High-temperature oxidation is a common cause of corrosion, which strongly influences the properties and service lives of metal materials. Various researchers have attempted to improve the high-temperature oxidation resistance of materials with surface modifications being the most general and intuitive approach, including the application of many kinds of coatings and surface modifications. The oxidation behavior of materials has been widely researched with high-temperature oxidation experiments usually based on Wagner’s theory, which is a classic theoretical model. This states that ion diffusion is the key cause of oxidation. The oxidation kinetics of metal materials depends on the metal type and the oxidizing conditions. Existing oxidation kinetics models are generally categorized into linear, parabolic, cubic, and logarithmic rate laws

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