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Thermal Spraying Equipments


PTA Process

Plasma Transferred Arc Process ( PTA Process ) is used to fuse a metallic coating to a  substrate in order to improve its resistance against wear  and/or corrosion.

During the process, metal powder is fed into a molten weld puddle (fusion bath) generated by the plasma arc at high temperature (up  to 20,000 °C).
All welding parameters, including powder feed, power input, plasma gas and shielding gas, as well as torch and work piece movement are automatized and computer controlled in PLASMA TEAM equipment.

PTA hard facing is a true welding process, with a metallic bond between the substrate and deposit.

Deposit thickness can range from 0.6 to 6.0 mm, width from 3 to 10  mm when using a single pass; multi pass welding reaches  deposit thickness up 20 mm and width over 30 mm.

The core of PTA process is PLASMA . The plasma  (a gas sufficiently ionized to be electrically  conductive) can be viewed as the natural state of  matter (the so called fourth state of matter),  with the other states existing only as variants  to the normal.

PTA Welding

In PTA hard facing, two DC power supplies are used to first establish a non-transferred arc ( pilot arc ) between the tungsten electrode (-)  and the anodic nozzle (+) and then a transferred arc between the tungsten electrode (-) and the work piece (+).


The pilot arc  is struck by an High Frequency device and the plasma gas  flowing around the cathode is ionized at the electrode  tip. When the transferred arc is ignited, the work piece becomes part of the electrical circuit and the plasma arc is directed and focused through the torch orifice into the work piece.

Powder is metered, under a positive pressure of Argon flow, from  the bottom of the torch into a pool of molten metal on  the work piece surface.

The torch is then either moved by a side-beam carriage over the work piece, or the work piece is rotated or moved under the  torch to produce a weld overlay deposit.

The plasma arc deposit is fully dense and metallurgically bonded to the work piece. The deposit microstructure is dense, with formation of dendrites during solidification. One of the most important features of the PTA process is the control of dilution. PTA produces dilution as low as 5%, compared to 20-25% typically obtained when hard facing by MGAW (MIG) and GTAW (TIG) processes.  So it is possible to maintain the noble properties of  deposit even in one single pass.

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