Summary of NASA Research on Thermal-Barrier Coatings

770343

02/01/1977

Event
1977 International Automotive Engineering Congress and Exposition
Authors Abstract
Content
This paper summarizes the work conducted at the NASA Lewis Research Center to evolve and evaluate a two-layer, thermal-barrier coating system. A durable, two-layer, plasma-sprayed coating consisting of a ceramic layer over a metallic layer was developed that has the potential of insulating hot engine parts and thereby reducing metal temperatures and coolant flow requirements and/or permitting use of less costly and complex cooling configurations and materials. The investigations evaluated the reflective and insulative capability, microstructure, and durability of several coating materials on flat metal specimens, a combustor liner, and turbine vanes and blades. In addition, the effect on the aerodynamic performance of a coated turbine vane was measured. The tests were conducted in furnaces, cascades, hot-gas rigs, an engine combustor, and a research turbojet engine. Included also are summaries of current research related to the coating and potential applications for the coating.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/770343
Pages
13
Citation
Stepka, F., Liebert, C., and Stecura, S., "Summary of NASA Research on Thermal-Barrier Coatings," SAE Technical Paper 770343, 1977, https://doi.org/10.4271/770343.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Feb 1, 1977
Product Code
770343
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English