Abstract

A dense inner layer is highly valued among the surface coatings created through plasma electrolytic oxidation (PEO) treatment, because the PEO coating has been troubled by inherent porosity since its conception. To produce the favored structure, a proven technique is to prompt a soft sparking transition, which involves a sudden decrease in light and acoustic emissions, and a drop in anodic voltage under controlled current mode. Typically these phenomena occur in an electrolyte of sodium silicate and potassium hydroxide, when an Al-based sample is oxidized with an AC or DC (alternating or direct current) pulse current preset with the cathodic current exceeding the anodic counterpart. The dense inner layer feature is pronounced if a sufficient amount of oxide has been amassed on the surface before the transition begins. Tremendous efforts have been devoted to understand soft sparking at the metal–oxide–electrolyte interface. Studies on aluminum alloys reveal that the dense inner layer requires plasma softening to avoid discharge damages while maintaining a sufficient growth rate, a porous top layer to retain heat for sintering the amassed oxide, and proper timing to initiate the transition and end the surface processing after transition. Despite our understanding, efforts to replicate this structural feature in Mg- and Ti-based alloys have not been very successful. The soft sparking phenomena can be reproduced, but the acquired structures are inferior to those on aluminum alloys. An analogous quality of the dense inner layer is only achieved on Mg- and Ti-based alloys with aluminate anion in the electrolytic solution and a suitable cathodic current. These facts point out that the current soft sparking knowledge on Mg- and Ti-based alloys is insufficient. The superior inner layer on the two alloys still relies on rectification and densification of aluminum oxide.

Highlights

  • Plasma electrolytic oxidation (PEO) is a surface coating technology that goes beyond anodizing in metal protection

  • It is worth mentioning that plasma electrolytic oxidation belongs to a branch of electrolytic plasma technology, including many surface treatments with the metal sample as a cathode or anode surrounded by a gas envelope accompanied by luminous discharges

  • We focus our attention on soft sparking issues of the Al, Mg, Ti-based metals, since this phenomenon uniquely generates a dense inner layer without porosity

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Summary

Introduction

Plasma electrolytic oxidation (PEO) is a surface coating technology that goes beyond anodizing in metal protection. It is worth mentioning that plasma electrolytic oxidation belongs to a branch of electrolytic plasma technology, including many surface treatments with the metal sample as a cathode or anode surrounded by a gas envelope accompanied by luminous discharges. Attempts to reproduce soft sparking transitions on Mg- and Ti-based alloys do not reproduce the same quality of dense inner layer, the electrolytic solution contains aluminate and the operation conditions fulfill the soft sparking requirements. This conclusion suggests that the current knowledge on Mg and Ti metals is incomplete. Understanding the rectification and densification of Mg- and Ti-oxides ought to enable us to create dense inner layers without aluminum oxide

Transition Phenomena
Microstructure Features
Plasma Softening
The Cathodic Current Sets the Tone
Plasma State in Electron Temperature
Amassed Oxide and Energy Consumption
Coating Growth and Uniformity
Soft Sparking on Mg-Based Alloys
Soft Sparking on Ti-Based Alloys
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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