In the solar glare of a vacuum furnace, a tray of steel tools glows
brighter than neon as their illuminated surfaces harden. The heat treated
tools are being surface-hardened with titanium nitride to give them incredible
toughness and resistance to wear. For industry, this process can potentially
extend the lifespan of machinery tools by up to 400%. For consumers,
it can mean a new set of designer bathroom taps – forged of metal
but treated to look like brass or 18K gold.
The innovative process to create these surface enhancement treatments
is now sparking a new generation of designer alloys. It has us on the
verge of being able to customize the composition of virtually any surface
alloy – whether to coat the nose cone of a jet fighter or the anodized
hands of your watch.
Here in Ontario, Exactatherm is advancing coating technologies and thermal
processing, taking them in enterprising new directions. The strength
of their success was forged in partnership with Ontario Centres of Excellence
(OCE), with whom they’ve formed a powerful bond.
Exactatherm is thriving proof: when OCE brings industry partners together
with leading university researchers, the power of innovation is unleashed.
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Understanding the
Duplex-Coating Process
Coating technologies
use alloys to form harder and stronger surface treatments
to protect various tools, objects, and components. In their
latest process, Exactatherm combines plasma ion nitriding
with Physical Vapor Deposition (PVD) vacuum coating to
produce a duplex-coating. For industrial applications,
this new coating enhances the performance of tools and
components by increasing load-bearing capacity.
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Breaking the Mold.
Dr. Peter Lidster, an accomplished metallurgist, was looking for a way
to improve the tool and die making process at the heart of his heat-treating
and ion-nitriding business. He wanted "to master the fundamentals of
more complex coating technologies". OCE listened to his concerns. They
took Dr. Lidster to the University of Toronto, and introduced him to
several specialists in metallurgy. This meeting of minds was the first
step in a path to help Exactatherm refine the development of their practices
and technologies.
Given Exactatherm’s direction and ambitions, they were a perfect
candidate for OCE’s First Job initiative. OCE shared the cost of
hiring a PhD-level researcher to bring to Exactatherm the advanced technical
and research expertise that could really jump-start the operation.
The new brain trust at Exactatherm set the stage for significant advances – as
the company became the first in Canada to introduce a new filtered arc
Physical Vapor Deposition (PVD) vacuum coating process. The development
of the new filtered arc process meant that Exactatherm could provide
a coating substantially cleaned of contaminants (macros) typical in the
conventional process: contaminants that would be the site of weakness
in the coating and the source of corrosion. This technology is now used
to create brilliant and highly durable and functional metallic finishes
on everything from high strength engineering products, plumbing fixtures,
and electronic components to jewelry and household appliances. Future
development is aimed at introducing this technology to automotive and
aerospace components.
Sparking Connections.
OCE then connected Exactatherm with researchers from McMaster University
with expertise in surface enhancement treatments who could further advance
the filtered arc coating process. The team played an important role in
the development of Exactatherm’s coating technology which enabled
the company to expand its workforce by an additional five people.
One advance followed another and Exactatherm and OCE kept pushing the
frontiers with ongoing research programs co-authored with the Ontario
university community. The next step combines the PVD process with plasma
ion nitriding, creating a new duplex-coating with applications in aerospace
and consumer products.
Dr. Lidster excitedly envisions the potential to take alloy processing
even further: “Start with pure titanium, flow the aluminum into
that and vary the process. If we can do this, it will be incredible.
We will essentially be doing our own alloying.”
Raising the Bar.
Driving innovation is just one part of the OCE process. Just as important
is OCE’s connection to industry standards committees like the SAE/AMEC.
The OCE business development team keeps right up to date on North American
standards and practices for the heat-treating industry. OCE acts as a
liaison to Exactatherm so they can keep their standards right on the
leading edge of industrial practices. As Dr. Lidster explains, “I’ve
learnt a lot about specifications from our contacts at OCE, how they
are written and why they are written.”
This knowledge has proven invaluable – the close attention to
spec, standards and practices recently paid out a massive dividend for
Exactatherm here in Ontario. Dr. Lidster reports: “We recently
received our biggest order ever – 160,000 lbs. of high value material
for plasma ion nitriding – from China.” An American construction
company is involved with building steel mills there. They needed high-end
coating and in their comparative assessment of all the suppliers, they
rated Exactatherm as technically superior.
Exactatherm continues to expand facilities and operations – with
two plants in Ontario and one opening recently in the United States.
Peter Lidster is quick to point out that “OCE has been instrumental
in getting us to this level.”
Clearly, the science of alloys supports the theory: combine the right
elements in the right conditions – and fuse them into something
stronger than ever before.
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