4.4 Review

Heat Transfer Through Plasma-Sprayed Thermal Barrier Coatings in Gas Turbines: A Review of Recent Work

Journal

JOURNAL OF THERMAL SPRAY TECHNOLOGY
Volume 18, Issue 5-6, Pages 809-821

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11666-009-9337-y

Keywords

plasma spray coatings; pore connectivity; sintering; thermal barrier coatings; thermal conductivity; zironia

Funding

  1. Basque Government scholarship
  2. EPSRC
  3. Sulzer Metco (US) Inc.
  4. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [GR/R95364/01] Funding Source: researchfish

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A review is presented of how heat transfer takes place in plasma-sprayed (zirconia-based) thermal barrier coatings (TBCs) during operation of gas turbines. These characteristics of TBCs are naturally of central importance to their function. Current state-of-the-art TBCs have relatively high levels of porosity (similar to 15%) and the pore architecture (i.e., its morphology, connectivity, and scale) has a strong influence on the heat flow. Contributions from convective, conductive and radiative heat transfer are considered, under a range of operating conditions, and the characteristics are illustrated with experimental data and modeling predictions. In fact, convective heat flow within TBCs usually makes a negligible contribution to the overall heat transfer through the coating, although what might be described as convection can be important if there are gross through-thickness defects such as segmentation cracks. Radiative heat transfer, on the other hand, can be significant within TBCs, depending on temperature and radiation scattering lengths, which in turn are sensitive to the grain structure and the pore architecture. Under most conditions of current interest, conductive heat transfer is largely predominant. However, it is not only conduction through solid ceramic that is important. Depending on the pore architecture, conduction through gas in the pores can play a significant role, particularly at the high gas pressures typically acting in gas turbines (although rarely applied in laboratory measurements of conductivity). The durability of the pore structure under service conditions is also of importance, and this review covers some recent work on how the pore architecture, and hence the conductivity, is affected by sintering phenomena. Some information is presented concerning the areas in which research and development work needs to be focussed if improvements in coating performance are to be achieved.

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