Tips for specifying
electroless-nickel coatings.(Brief Article)
Electroless-nickel (EN) plating is
also known as chemical or autocatalytic nickel plating. In contrast to the
electroplating (galvanic) technique, EN plating baths work without an
externally applied electric current. The plating operation is based on the
catalytic reduction of nickel ions onto suitable substrates. The EN process
deposits uniformly hard coatings on any section of a part exposed to fresh
plating solution. Grooves, slots, blind holes, threads, and even the inside of
tubing will have the same thickness of coating.
The EN plating process is, however,
more than just dunking parts into a plating bath. In fact, the plating tank is
only one component in a sequence of processing steps. Bath chemistry and
composition play an important role during the EN plating process. But there are
other considerations that contribute equally to coating success.
The best plating process is one
that prioritizes all requirements such as the primary and secondary functions
of the coating and the environment it must withstand. These parameters help the
coating house establish a well-thought-out sequence of preplating, plating,
postplating, and/or testing processes.
Preplating considerations -- Always
consider the necessity for preplate stress relief on hardened-steel components.
Preplate stress relief reduces and/or redistributes localized residual
stresses. These stresses come from manufacturing processes such as machining,
forming, welding, and heat treatment.
In addition, the type of alloy, its
hardness or ultimate tensile strength, and final end use may also dictate
preplate stress relief. In fact, all major EN specifications make reference to
stress-relief treatments before plating. It is usually prudent to incorporate
stress relief on components made from hardened steel even if the plating does
not require a particular specification. Time and temperature guidelines can
come from industry specifications such as AMS 2404, AMS 2405, MIL-C-26074, and
ASTM B-733.
Parts undergo mechanical finishing
operations to improve surface finish or to remove gross surface contamination,
such as mill scale or weld slag. Vibratory deburring, blasting, and tumble
finishing. improve the surface condition and let the EN plating perform better.
Shot-peening not only improves finish, but may also serve to redistribute
localized stresses arising from machining and fabrication processes.
Components made from unusual or
difficult-to-plate alloys require chemical pretreatment to ensure the EN
coating has adequate initiation, adhesion, and overall deposit quality. Often
necessary are special activation processes, electrolytic strikes, or immersion
preplate deposits.
EN plating chemistry -- There are
entire volumes of information and related data that detail properties and
applications of EN. But most suppliers of EN chemistry have a few all-purpose
workhorse plating chemistries. They may also have proprietary hybrid chemistry
formulations that produce properties geared for highly specific applications.
Generally it's best to look for a plating house that carries several different
plating processes. Platers should also be able to handle a select number of
hybrid EN formulations along with their workhorse chemistries. Important for
them as well is good understanding of pretreatment processes as previously
discussed.
Postplating requirements -- As with
stress relief, all major specifications make reference to hydrogen
embrittlement relief after EN plating. This is especially true for highly
hardened-steel components. Such components need proper baking to remove
potentially detrimental effects resulting from the absorption of hydrogen
during pretreatment and EN plating. However, there are some possible
exceptions. These include parts not subject to extreme service conditions or
those that would degrade from elevated temperatures needed for hydrogen
embrittlement relief.
A postplate baking process can
improve the adhesion of the EN deposit for some applications. Certain aluminum
alloys, high carbon steels, and other materials may exhibit much better
adhesion when baked after plating. Baking is said to reduce EN deposit stress
and help eliminate localized blistering or other failures. Time and temperature
guidelines for baking are included in the previously referenced EN
specifications.
EN deposits are age-hardenable when
heat treated at elevated temperatures -- [greater than]490[degrees]F. Hardness
values in excess of 68 [R.sub.c] are possible with carefully specified heat
treatments. The downside to heat treatment, however, is that the plating has
less corrosion resistance, especially on high phosphorous deposits. Heat
treatment of EN deposits is said to help convert the nickel-phosphorous alloy
from an amorphous to a crystalline structure. It's therefore prudent to
exercise caution when specifying heat treatment. The substrate may also soften
while the EN deposit is being produced. Many platers have converted to low or
low mid-phosphorous chemistries, which provide similar hardness values straight
from the bath, eliminating the need for heat treatment.
COPYRIGHT 2000 Penton Media, Inc.
COPYRIGHT 2000 Gale Group
Stellex using nickel, iron
powders.(Brief Article)
Issue: May 8, 2000
DETROIT -- High-nickel alloy
components for microwave communications equipment are being made from powder
metals by Stellex Microwave Co., Palo Alto, Calif., using the metal injection
molding (MIM) process. The powder metals are nickel and iron mixed for melting
and injection molding under high pressure. The parts are sintered after
molding.
COPYRIGHT 2000 Cahners Publishing
Company
COPYRIGHT 2000 Gale Group