Turbine

Virtual | 9 Sept 2020

Coatings and Ceramics Seminar - Sanjay Sampath

Date :
09 September 2020
Time :
3:00 pm - 4:00 pm
Event Type :
Webinar

Register here

Book now
Thermal Spray as an Additive and Layered Manufacturing Technology for Applications in Energy Systems


Sanjay Sampath
Center for Thermal Spray Research
Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY 11794-2275

Thermal spraying is a directed melt spray deposition process, in which inorganic particles in the diameter range of 1-100 microns are heated, melted (in some cases partially), propelled and impacted onto a prepared substrate. A rapid sequence of events occurs including: melting, impact (in some cases shock), spreading and rapid solidification, all of which take place in microsecond timescales, enabling materials synthesis from extreme conditions. The sprayed coating is resultant from successive assemblage of such microscale impacted droplets (splats) producing mesoscale thick films or coatings. The coatings thus produced are anisotropic, layered structures with multiple length scales of material character and interfacial defects, with concomitant implications on properties. The layered assembly also imparts gradients in residual stresses within the thickness of the coating. These effects are in large part deemed “unintentional” and incorporated in many applications with limited manipulation.
With advancements in understanding of process dynamics and the ability to control microstructures at both the splat and coating level, a fresh opportunity is available to engineer the layered assembly to provide novel through thickness properties and functionalities. In a sense, thermal spray can be considered within the context of emerging additive manufacturing concepts where the characteristics of the assembly can be manipulated across different available length scales. In this presentation, several embodiments of such concepts will be shown using the interplay among coating architecture design, materials and manufacturing. Specific examples include novel multilayer, multifunctional thermal barrier coatings, multifunctional coatings in fuel cells, thermoelectric devices and smart coatings with embedded sensors. Illustrative examples of their applicability in industrial systems will also be highlighted.

Dr. Sanjay Sampath, is currently Distinguished Professor of Materials Science at Stony Brook University (SUNY) and director of the Center for Thermal Spray Research (www.sunysb.edu/ctsr) an interdisciplinary industry-university partnership in the field of thermal spray materials processing and surface engineering. CTSR was created in 1996 through the National Science Foundation’s Materials Research Science and Engineering Centers program. He received his B.Tech from IIT-BHU and Ph.D. from Stony Brook in 1989. After graduating, he spent four years at GTE Sylvania involved in research, development, and processing of refractory metal compounds and composites. Upon joining the faculty at Stony Brook University in 1993, he has directed research efforts on various federal and industrially funded programs. Under the auspices of the NSF Center, he directed a group of a dozen or so interdisciplinary faculty members towards fundamental understanding of thermal spray processes, materials and applications. The self-sustaining Center (since 2005) is home to the Industrial Consortium for Thermal Spray Technology comprising of 35 leading companies aimed at knowledge transfer from fundamental research to applications. He was also principal investigator on the DARPA Mesoscale Integrated Conformal Electronics (MICE) project enabling 3D printing of sensors via direct write thermal spray technology. Dr. Sampath has 220 journal publications to his credit, 15 patents and winner of several best paper awards. He has advised more than 60 MS and PHD students over 20 post-doctoral fellows and more than 100 undergraduates. He received the SUNY Chancellor’s Award for excellence in scholarship and creative activitie, elected Fellow of ASM International and American Ceramic Society, recipient of 2007 R&D 100 award for developing direct write technology . In 2011, he was recognized as a State University of New York Distinguished Professor, . In 2015 he was inducted into the ASM Thermal Spray Hall-of-Fame. In 2017 he received the Application to Practice Award from TMS and in 2019 he will receive the John Jeppson Award from American Ceramic Society and in 2020 the ASM Albert Sauveur Award.

Meeting Link


Zoom Link: https://zoom.us/j/94618190657