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Nickel coatings corrosion resistance

Phillips and Timms [599] described a less general method. They converted germanium and silicon in alloys into hydrides and further into chlorides by contact with gold trichloride. They performed GC on a column packed with 13% of silicone 702 on Celite with the use of a gas-density balance for detection. Juvet and Fischer [600] developed a special reactor coupled directly to the chromatographic column, in which they fluorinated metals in alloys, carbides, oxides, sulphides and salts. In these samples, they determined quantitatively uranium, sulphur, selenium, technetium, tungsten, molybdenum, rhenium, silicon, boron, osmium, vanadium, iridium and platinum as fluorides. They performed the analysis on a PTFE column packed with 15% of Kel-F oil No. 10 on Chromosorb T. Prior to analysis the column was conditioned with fluorine and chlorine trifluoride in order to remove moisture and reactive organic compounds. The thermal conductivity detector was equipped with nickel-coated filaments resistant to corrosion with metal fluorides. Fig. 5.34 illustrates the analysis of tungsten, rhenium and osmium fluorides by this method. [Pg.192]

Electroless nickel coatings can be easily soldered and are used in electronic applications to facilitate soldering of light metals such as aluminum. Electroless nickel is often used as a barrier coating to be effective, the deposit must be free of pores and defects. In the as-deposited amorphous state, the coating corrosion resistance is excellent (Table 12), and in many environments is superior to that of pure nickel or chromium alloys. However, after heat treatment the corrosion resistance can deteriorate. [Pg.151]

The noble metals, i.e. gold, platinum, palladium, and rhodium, and the corrosion-resistant metals, i.e. chromium, nickel, tin, tin-lead solder, and titanium, require no finish other than cleaning. Soldered joints should be protected with a moisture-proofing compound or coating. Corrosion-resistant (or treated to resist corrosion) minor devices (fasteners, etc.) should be used. Fasteners should be treated with zinc chromate, zinc chromate paste, or graphite-free dry-film anti-seize compound. [Pg.371]

The Fe, Co, and Ni deposits are extremely fine grained at high current density and pH. Electroless nickel, cobalt, and nickel—cobalt alloy plating from fluoroborate-containing baths yields a deposit of superior corrosion resistance, low stress, and excellent hardenabiUty (114). Lead is plated alone or ia combination with tin, iadium, and antimony (115). Sound iasulators are made as lead—plastic laminates by electrolyticaHy coating Pb from a fluoroborate bath to 0.5 mm on a copper-coated nylon or polypropylene film (116) (see Insulation, acoustic). Steel plates can be simultaneously electrocoated with lead and poly(tetrafluoroethylene) (117). Solder is plated ia solutioas containing Pb(Bp4)2 and Sn(Bp4)2 thus the lustrous solder-plated object is coated with a Pb—Sn alloy (118). [Pg.168]

Nickel-based aUoys have superior corrosion resistance to Hon-based aUoys. The only aUoys recommended for hot hydrochloric acid use are Ni—Mo aUoys containing 60—70% Ni and 25—33% Mo. Chlorimet (63 Ni, 32 Mo, 3 Fe) and HasteUoy (60 Ni, 28 Mo, 6 Fe) are found to be stable at aU acid concentrations in the absence of aH and Hon chlorides. Electroless nickel, a Ni—P aUoy containing 2—10% P, shows exceUent resistance to hot hydrogen chloride (71). The corrosion resistance increases with phosphoms content. This coating can be deposited on cast Hon, wrought Hon, mild steel, stainless steels, brass, bron2e, and aluminum (qv). [Pg.446]

Electroless nickel or nickel—lead alloys can improve the solderabiUty and braisabiUty of aluminum even when a continuous film is not present. Electroless nickel systems based on dimethylaminehorane reduciag agents are used to coat aluminum contacts and semiconductors (qv) ia the electronics iadustry. Newer uses iaclude corrosion-resistant electroless nickel topcoatings on electroless copper plating for radio frequency... [Pg.109]

Zinc—Nickel. Steel has the best salt spray resistance when the nickel is 12—13% of the alloy. At increasing nickel contents, the deposit becomes more difficult to chromate and more noble, eventually becoming cathodic to steel. At those levels and above, corrosion resistance usually decreases and is dependent on a complete lack of porosity for protection of the steel. In efforts to replace cadmium and nickel—ca dmium diffused coatings in the aircraft industry, 2inc—nickel has insufficient wear properties for some appHcation, but is under study as an undercoat to various electroless nickel top coats (153). [Pg.165]

The resistance of a metal to erosion-corrosion is based principally on the tenacity of the coating of corrosion products it forms in the environment to which it is exposed. Zinc (brasses), aluminum (aluminum brass), and nickel (cupronickel) alloyed with copper increase the coating s tenacity. An addition of V2 to 1)4% iron to cupronickel can greatly increase its erosion-corrosion resistance for the same reason. Similarly, chromium added to iron-base alloys and molybdenum added to austenitic stainless steels will increase resistance to erosion-corrosion. [Pg.249]

The second approach, that of surface coating, is more difficult, and that means more expensive. But it is often worth it. Hard, corrosion resistant layers of alloys rich in tungsten, cobalt, chromium or nickel can be sprayed onto surfaces, but a refinishing process is almost always necessary to restore the dimensional tolerances. Hard ceramic coatings such as AbO, Cr203, TiC, or TiN can be deposited by plasma methods and these not only give wear resistance but resistance to oxidation and... [Pg.248]

Fig. 12.9 Corrosion resistance of tin-nickel electrodeposit impaired by pseudomorphic porosity originating on cold-rolled steel surface (left). Panel on right has had the shattered grain surface removed by chemical polishing (0-125 iim removed). Coating thickness 15 iim-, panels exposed 6 months to marine atmospheric corrosion (Hayling Island)... Fig. 12.9 Corrosion resistance of tin-nickel electrodeposit impaired by pseudomorphic porosity originating on cold-rolled steel surface (left). Panel on right has had the shattered grain surface removed by chemical polishing (0-125 iim removed). Coating thickness 15 iim-, panels exposed 6 months to marine atmospheric corrosion (Hayling Island)...

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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.415 ]




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