What is Thermal Spray
              What it Was and What it Has Become
                  by Frank J. Hermanek
                  
                  On   the eve of celebrating the one hundred anniversary of its discovery,   thermal spraying looks back to its roots - early experiments in which   liquids were broken up into fine particles by a stream of high-pressure   gas. Efforts more directed at producing powders rather than constructing   coatings. It fell to one Dr. Max Ulrick Schoop of Zurich who recognized   the possibility that a stream of molten particles impinging upon   themselves could create a coating. His work, and that of his   collaborators, resulted in the establishment of the thermal spray   process. This process has fostered a worldwide industry serving over   thirty technology sectors and generating sales of over two billion   dollars per year. This article traces the history and development of the   principal flame and electrical thermal spray processes. 
thermal spraying, a group of coating processes in which finely divided metallic or nonmetallic materials are deposited in a molten or semimolten condition to form a coating. The coating material may be in the form of powder, ceramic-rod, wire, or molten materials.
In the early 1900's Dr. M. U. Schoop and his associates developed equipment and techniques for producing coatings using molten and powder metals. Several years later, in about 1912, their efforts produced the first instrument for the spraying of solid metal in wire form. This simple device was based on the principle that if a wire rod were fed into an intense, concentrated flame, (the burning of a fuel gas with oxygen), it would melt and, if the flame were surrounded by a stream of compressed gas, the molten metal would become atomized and readily propelled onto a surface to create a coating. This process was initially referred to as metallizing. Currently the technique is known as oxy-fuel or flame spraying. Other oxy-fuel methods include wire, powder (metallic and ceramic), molten metal, ceramic-rod, detonation and high velocity oxy-fuel (HVOF).
In addition to using chemical means to plasticize the in-put consumables electrical currents are also used. Typically, electrical energy is used to create a heat source into which powder, and more recently wires, are fed, melted/plasticized and conveyed onto the surface to be coated. Major, commercially employed electrical methods, used to construct coatings include non-transferred arc plasma, RF plasma, and wire arc. Based upon the two heat sources a "family tree" of thermal spray methods can be constructed as noted below.
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