Breakthrough in Improving Car Engine Performance Through Coatings
Breakthrough in Improving Car Engine Performance Through Coatings
Breakthrough in Improving Car Engine Performance Through Coatings
GRARD BARBEZAT RALPH HERBER SULZER METCO The cylinder bores of combustion engines made of aluminium-silicium alloys must have wearresistance surfaces. The plasma coating solution RotaPlasma developed by Sulzer Metco offers economic and ecological advantages for this requirement. The process is being employed for the first time in the serial production of the new Volkswagen Lupo FSI.
1I The RotaPlasma system from Sulzer Metco is being used for the first time to coat the cylinder bores of automotive engines in the new Volkswagen (VW) Lupo FSI. This reduces the consumption of both fuel and oil.
Volkswagen AG (VW) has been coating engine blocks for the 4-cylinder engines of the new Lupo FSI with a serial production system from Sulzer Metco since October 2000 (Fig. 1I). This large contract is the result of goaloriented, innovative co-operation with the automobile manufacturer, on the basis of an excellent technical concept. The FSI engine of the Lupo is made of AlSi alloy for reasons of cost and weight. In view of their good operating characteristics, cast iron liners have been mostly employed in the cylinder liner area of the engine blocks, which have been manufactured from aluminium up to now. These liners need to have a specific wall thickness, which results in a relatively
large web width between the individual cylinder bores and increases the dimensions and weight of the engine. For the Lupo, VW has turned to a coating solution developed by Sulzer Metco. With RotaPlasma, it is possible to insert a plasma-coated track in an aluminium-cylinder crankcase. The surface coating powder (composite material of steel and molybdenum), which was developed in close co-operation with VW, is applied by means of a plasma jet at an approximate temperature level of 10 000 C.
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comparison with the piston ring material. Further features are its low wear rate compared to cast iron liners with flake graphite, and its thermal resistance. The material can be worked well by means of diamond honing, and bonds admirably with AlSi cast alloys. On completion of the coating operation, a special honing process (Fig. 2I) is employed to create a surface topography with numerous small recesses, which serve as oil reservoirs. This leads to an improvement in hydrodynamic lubrication and reduces the piston ring stress. In comparison with the traditional cast iron process, it results in a 2030% lower friction and a weight reduction of about 1 kg per engine. Thanks to the good tribological characteristics of the plasma coating, the life-
cycle of the engine is lengthened, while emissions decrease as a result of the reduction in fuel and oil consumption.
2I Together with plasma spraying, the honing process creates a surface (Photo: left) that lessens the friction between the piston ring and the cylinder liner. Whereas edge contacts are possible with cast iron liners, the piston rings are now float-mounted.
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4I In comparison with other coating processes for cylinder bores, plasma coating is less expensive and more efficient. This is attributable to the high degree of latitude during the selection of the coating material and lower heat transfer.
bility in the casting process with which the engine blocks can be manufactured, but also with its excellent price-performance ratio (Fig. 4I). Nickel dispersion layers which are applied to cylinder friction surfaces by means of galvanic processes have been frequently employed up to now. However, they have considerable economic and ecological disadvantages in comparison with plasma spraying. On the one hand, the nickel layer contains silicon particles that are liberated by the sulphurous fuel and attack the piston rings, which increases oil consumption. On the other hand, galvanic processes are being increasingly censured by environmental regulations, because the microparticles of the health-impairing nickel can gain access to the environment through the exhaust. The two thermal spraying processes HVOF (High-
Velocity Oxy-Fuel) and Electric Arc Wire, which can also be employed for the coating of cylinder friction surfaces, are still in the experimental stage. Moreover, these processes are encumbered with a number of restrictions with regard to the selection of the coating material and the reliability of the smelting process.
materials, but also in the elaboration of a process know-how, which will enable the coating solution to be integrated into a fabrication concept for engine blocks. The coating process must be able to meet the customary, high-quantity requirements of the automobile industry. VW and Sulzer Metco have been working closely together since 1993. In addition to the coating material, which fulfils the stringent wear characteristics and low sliding friction values that are required for cylinder liner surfaces, it has also led to the development of a customized coating system (Fig. 5I). The central point of this development was also the realization of a fully automatic coating plant which not only masters coating, but also feed, surface preparation, cleaning, cooling and the further transportation of the engine blocks. The focal point of the coating system is the plasma burner SM F210, which by processing metallic powder exhibits a coating efficiency of about 80%. This high efficiency and a high powder-feed rate (dependent on the cylinder diameter) facilitate short coating times and a low consumption of powder material. The plant for VW was delivered in December 1999. It has been in operation since October 2000. The coating system is already designed for a capacity increase.
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addition to Europe, Sulzer Metco also holds a good position in the Asian and American markets. Furthermore, Sulzer Metco is already working closely with other manufactures in the racing engine sector. Sulzer Metco also offers customized solutions for coating systems and materials for this application of engine technology.
5I The coating system adapts itself to an integral concept for the manufacture of engine blocks. Automation, control and the employment of the plasma burner SM F210 result in an excellent quality.
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