Title of Invention

SN-CONTAINING HEAVY-DUTY MATERIAL COMPOSITION, METHOD FOR THE PRODUCTION OF A HEAVY-DUTY COATING, AND USE THEREOF

Abstract The invention relates to an Sn-containing heavy-duty material composition for coating base metals. Said material composition comprises : 0.6 to 01 wt. % of Sn; 75 to 94 wt. % of A1; 0.7 to 82 wt.% of Cu; 0 to 27 wt. % of Pb; 6 to 30 wt. % of Sb; 0 to 2 wt. % of Zn; 0 to 1 wt. % of Ni; 0 to 1 wt. % of As; 0 to 0.2 wt. % of Ag; 0 to 1.2 wt. % of Cd; 0 to 0.1 wt. % of Se; 0 to 0.2 wt. % of Cr; 0 to 2 wt % of Bi; 0 to 5 wt. % of In; optional hardeners, solid lubricants, auxiliary welding agents. Also disclosed is a method for producing a heavy-duty coating composed of 0.6 to 95 wt. % of Sn; 75 to 94 wt. % of A1; 0.7 to 82 wt. % of Cu; 0 to 27 wt. % of Pb; 6 to 30 wt. % of Sb; 0 to 2 wt. % of Zn; 0 to 1 wt. % of Ni; 0 to 1 wt. % of As; 0 to 0.2 wt. % of Ag; 0 to 1.2 wt. % of Cd; 0 to 0,1 wt. % of Se; 0 to 0.2 wt. % of Cr. 0 to 2 wt. % of Bi; 0 to 5 wt. % of In, optional hardeners, solid lubricants, auxiliary welding agents, and auxiliary processing agents such as free-flowing agents, pressing agents. According to the inventive method, an input stock of said composition of provided, the input stock is introduced into a laser welding station, one or several metal layers are laser-welded onto a base metal by means of the laser welding station, and the obtained heavy-duty coating is optionally finished. The invention finally relates to the use of said coating as a heavy- duty coating on base metals, bearing.
Full Text Sn-comprising heavy-duty material composition: Method for the production
of a heavy-duty coating, and use thereof
The invention relates to a Sn-comprising material composition for coating
base metals, methods for the production of a Sn-comprising heavy duty
coating on base metals, and the use of this coating. Heavy-duty metal
coatings are produced as a compound of metal bases. For this purpose,
special heavy-duty metal materials are used, which are applied to the metal
bases (support structures). Often, heavy-duty metal materials are employed
on Sn basis, which have positive slide, running-in, embedding and fail-safe
characteristics. In case the coating is more strongly stressed thermally, or
the static and dynamic stress of the coating is high, as is the case with
bearings more likely to experience collision and impact, additional elements
must be employed. Typical applications are heavily stressed bearings in
compressors, pistons and expansion machines as well as rolling equipment.
In the following, the term ,,metal" refers to an individual metal as well metal
alloys and composites comprising a high percentage of metal. Powder
mixtures as well as compressed powders or composites are understood to be
metal mixtures.
Because the support structures of the heavy-duty coating consist, at least at
its surface, of metal or a metal alloy, a bond between the heavy-duty coating
material and the surface of the support structure must be produced.
Generally, many different methods can be used to produce a bond between
the metal layers: sand casting, centrifugal casting, cast cladding, roll
cladding, galvanic coating, soldering, welding, etc. In doing this, it is
important that the heavy-duty coating material adheres well to the support
material, with as much capacity for withstanding stress as possible. In order
to coat metal support structures, Sn-comprising layers - e.g. Sn- founding
alloys according to DIN ISO 4381, UNI 4515, ASTM B23, e.g. SnSbl2Cu6, or
other Sn-alloys or copper alloys according to DIN IS04382, eg. CuPb20Sn5,

or other Cu-alloys, known to expert in the technical field are employed;
alternatively, aluminum based alloys, e.g. AISn20Cul are used.
Until now, narrow boundaries for the metal alloys of heavy-duty coating
material had to be taken into account for the security of the metal bond
between the heavy-duty coating and the metal support structures. In this
way, the Sb-content of all established, lead-free tin casting-alloys were, until
now, restricted to a maximum of 14 wt. % and the Cu-content to a maximum
of 9 wt. %; a fine crystal texture, satisfying homogeneity, and particularly
the required bond (without segregation) could only be achieved in this way.
Through the boundaries preset by the casting process, material development
has previously had strict boundaries imposed on it. A material group is
designated as a tin casting-alloy when it, for example, qualifies to cast
bearings, which comprise a maximum 91 wt. % of Sn and maximum 14% of
Sb and maximum 9% of Cu, as well as optional minimal portions of further
elements such as Cd, Zn, Ni, Ag, Se, Cr, Bi, In for example.
In order to improve crystallization, refining elements such as As or Ag were
added to the tin alloys, wherein As causes an environmental problem and Ag
is relatively expensive. Qualified alloys are, for example:
SnSbl2Cu6Zn0,6Ag0, 1.
Another material for the heavy-duty metal coatings is copper alloys. They
comprise >50% of Cu, up to 20 wt. % of Sn, and up to 27% of Pb and are
characterized through resistance to various media. Because both copper
alloys and Sn- casting alloys comprise many of the same components albeit
with different amounts thereof, a transition zone exists between the two.
Typical representatives for such metals for heavy-duty coatings are
CuPb10Sn10, CuPb20Sn5.
In the end, Sn-comprising aluminum alloys are employed as heavy-duty
coatings. In this way, AISn20, AISn20Cu, AISn6Cu, for example, are used for
the production of bearings.

Until now, a pretreatment of the bonding surface of the metal support
structure in order to achieve a good bond between the metal layers was
necessary for adhesion reasons. For example, corrosives or a tinning of the
bonding surface become conditions for compound casting between metal
base bodies like steel, cast steel, gray cast iron, bronze and Sn-comprising
coating materials are required; this leads to involved, cost-intensive and
often also pollutive procedures. For some procedures and material pairings,
additional metallic inter-layers are necessary; this brings additional effort
with it.
Until now, most coatings of this sort are cast. Casting such coating materials
entails high efforts. To do this, an exact temperature control is required and
often a pretreatment of the support material with mostly toxic corrosives like
zinc chloride compounds. This also requires an alloy which can be cast and
which can be applied to the support material without segregations or other
decomposition phenomena. In casting procedures, a defined warming of the
support structure and defined cooling after it has been poured out are also
necessary in order to achieve a good quality of crystal texture, high
homogeneity and bonding through equal temperature profiles in both layers.
After the application of the metal layer comprising tin, a machining process is
necessary in order to give the coating its final form.
According to the state of the art, this meant the provision of casting
equipment and the according monitoring and post-processing equipment. In
the case of complex support structures with strongly varying material
thickness, it is, in practice, often difficult to accomplish an even and satisfying
heavy-duty metal layer casting. Also in the case of other methods named
above, the adherence to various parameters are required for a positive
bonding and used to depend strongly on the individual processing
requirements- the method was difficult to standardize.

Another method for applying a particularly thin heavy-duty metal layer was a
galvanic coating for the production of multi-layer compound materials.
The thin coating can also be produced through roll cladding on the bases of
Sn-, AI-, Cu-alloys with a high resistance and a thickness of mostly under one
millimeter.
The stress capacity of the coating rises for thin heavy-duty metal coatings—
the pressure resistance as well as the load bearing capacity of the coating.
In contrast to all other materials mentioned, the Sn-casting alloys possess
good fail-safe characteristics when in contact with a slide partner and display
particularly tolerant properties in the event of damage, wherein the slide
partner is not damaged. Sn-casting alloys are relatively soft and can embed
impurities. Until now, they could not be designated as heavy-duty because of
the required larger layer thicknesses (casting procedures). Copper alloys,
which are also employed, are relatively hard and because of this, lead to
significant damages to the slide partner in the case of breakdowns
For this reason, the problem of the invention is to create a simplified method
for the production of Sn-comprising heavy-duty metal-coatings.
According to the invention, the problem is solved through a Sn-comprising
heavy-duty material composition for the coating of metal bases comprising:
0.6 - 91 wt. % of Sn; 75 - 94 wt. % of Al; 0.7 -8 2 wt. % of Cu; 0 - 27 wt. %
of Pb; 6 - 30 wt. % of Sb; 0 - 2 wt. % of Zn; 0 - 1 wt. % of Ni; 0 - 1 wt. %
of As; 0 - 0.2 wt. % of Ag; 0 - 1.2 wt. % of Cd; 0 - 0.1 wt. % of Se; 0 - 0.2
wt. % of Cr; 0 - 2 wt. % of Bi; 0 - 5 wt. % of In; optional hard materials,
solid lubricants, auxiliary welding agents.
Surprisingly, it is now possible, that because of the new processing methods
according to the invention, these materials, which could not be used in
conventional casting procedures, can be employed for heavy-duty coatings

on metal bases. Because until now, the method required extremely restricted
properties of alloys as capable of being cast, compositions which did not
satisfy any of the casting characteristics could not be used for heavy-duty
coatings; this led to the widespread belief that they could not be used at all.
Further, the invention also relates to methods for producing a heavy-duty
coating with a composition of 0.6 - 91 wt. % of Sn; 75 - 94 wt. % of Al; 0.7 -
82 wt. % of Cu; 0 - 27 wt. % of Pb; 6 - 30 wt. % of Sb; 0 - 2 wt. % of Zn; 0
- 1 wt. % of Ni; 0 - 1 wt. % of As; 0 - 0.2 wt. % of Ag; 0 - 1.2 wt. % of Cd;
0-0.1 wt. % of Se; 0 - 0.2 wt. % of Cr; 0 - 2 wt. % of Bi; 0 - 5 wt. % of In;
optional hard materials, solid lubricants, auxiliary welding agents and
auxiliary processing agents such as free-flowing agents and pressing agents.
According to the inventive method, an starting material of said composition is
provided, the starting material is introduced into the laser welding station,
one or several metal layers are laser-welded onto a base metal by means of
the laser welding station, and the obtained heavy-duty coating is optionally
finished. The invention finally relates to the use of said coating as a heavy-
duty coating on base metals, bearings.
Through the laser welding process/method, it is now possible to also apply
poor quality or not capable of being cast material compositions such as alloys
or compounds — with solid lubricants such as MoS2 or graphite composites,
etc. — to metal bases. Because no casting requirements must be taken into
account, these can be processed even without the costly warming of the
support structures and the subsequent cooling.
A useful material composition is a a Sn-rich heavy-duty material composition
wherein the composition contains 40 - 91% of Sn; 3-30 wt. % of Cu; 6-30
wt. % of Sb.
An advantageous Sn-rich heavy-duty material composition contains 61 - 83%
of Sn; 3 - 9% of Cu; >14 - 30% of Sb; 0.1 - 1% Zn.

A further advantageous alloy sub-group of the heavy-duty material
compositions contains 56-85 wt. % of Sn; >9 - 30 wt. % of CU; 6-14 % of
Sb; 0.1-1 wt. % of Zn. Alternatively, another Sn-rich heavy-duty material
composition can be employed comprising 40 - 77 wt. 5 of Sn; >9 - 30 wt. %
of Cu; > 14 - 30 wt. % of Sb; 0.1-1 wt. % of Zn.
Typical suitable Sn-rich heavy-duty material compositions can be, but are not
restricted to: SnSb7Cu7Zn0.8; SnSb7Cul2Zn0.8; SnSb7Cul8Zn0.8;
SnSbl2Cu6Zn0.8; SnSbl2Cul2Zn0.8; SnSbl2Cul8Zn0.8.
A further sub-group of the Sn-compositions are Cu-rich; these recommend
themselves with a content of: 0.6 - 20 wt. % of Sn; 50 - 83 wt. % of Cu; 0 -
27 wt. % of Pb.
Typical Cu-rich Sn-compositions have a content of 0.6 - 11 wt. % Sn; 78 - 82
wt. % of Cu; 9-27 wt/% of Pb. Typical Cu-rich Sn-compositions are:
SnSb8Cu4; CuPb10Sn10, CuPb17Sn5; CuPb25Sn4, CuPb24Snl, on which the
Cu-rich Sn-material compositions according to the invention are not in any
way restricted to.
Sn-comprising Al-rich material compositions have a percentage of 5 - 23 wt.
% of Sn; 75 - 94 wt. % Al, 0.7 - 2 wt. % of Cu; 0.1 - 1.5 wt. % of Ni. Typical
representatives, on which the the Al-rich Sn-comprising material
compositions according to the invention are in no way restricted to, include
AISn20Cu, AISn6Cu.
It is advantageous if the heavy-duty material composition is available in the
form of a powder, also a compressed powder, such as a powder pellet or a
friction-welded powder pellet.
The laser welding station is preferably selected from the group consisting of
the powder and wire laser welding stations, for the reason that these
procedures make an even application of the material possible.

When powder-based starting materials are employed, costly wire drawing can
be avoided. In using powder, the necessity to produce one or more wires is
not immediate and materials which are hardly, or not at all ductile, such as
for composites, can be processed. In this way, the processing is simplified,
particularly because powder can be added more constantly. However, the
wire is easy to handle and can, in some cases, be easier to store and to have
on hand. The powder can consist of a mixture or an alloy.
The wire can consist of a unitary material, but can also consist of various
components— for example, it can comprise a core made from another
material. The wire can be drawn in the usual way, but also through a powder
shaping process, such as the conform process or powder forging; optionally it
can be produced with pressing agents or adhesion agents.
In many cases, as is obvious to the expert in the technical field, laser welding
takes place in a protective gas atmosphere in order to avoid unwanted
oxidation or reactions with other air components such as dampness, nitrogen
or CO2. It can be preferable that a composite is formed from the starting
material.
A typical layer thickness of the applied layers of the Sn-comprising material
compositions is 0.05 to 3 mm.
Through the laser welding technology used according to the invention, it is
possible to apply thinner heavy-duty metal coatings on Sn-bases of good
quality with new compositions on metal support structures, wherein
advantageously and surprisingly any pretreatment of the bonding surface can
be avoided. As a result, the pretreatment which was necessary for casting
and which used ecologically questionable corrosives or tinning can be
avoided. The costly casting process with restricted non-uniform quality can
simply be replaced by laser welding. In addition, the preheating/cooling of
the materials, which was previously necessary in the casting process, can

also be avoided. This process was only necessary to achieve a good crystal
texture with good homogeneity and adhesion. Further, the result is no longer
influenced by the form of the coated body and the process can be undertaken
normally according to repeatable parameters. Even a repair of heavy-duty
coating or a new coating of metal supports on location is possible through the
use of mobile laser welding tools, wherein the result is only influenced by the
welding parameters.
In using the laser welding method, thin or thick layers as needed, which are
both homogeneous and finely crystalline, are achieved; in this way a very
quick economic coating of high quality is achieved.
Surprisingly, it has been established that the material boundaries of the
casting process, which requires alloys capable of being melted, no longer
apply in the case of laser welding. Now alloys and composites can be laser
welded, which could not be used in the casting process because of
decomposition phenomena and crystallization problems; refinement agents
are also no longer necessary because refinement takes place through the
application. For example, the amounts of Sb and Cu in the Sn- casting alloys
are not subject to any restriction necessitated by the procedure and crystal
refining elements such as As and Ag are no longer absolutely necessary.
In this way, Sn-comprising lead-free metal coating can essentially consist of
the basic elements Sn, Sb, Cu
a) with up to 14 wt. % Sb and up to 9 wt. % Cu,
optionally with further elements such as, for example: from 0 to 1 wt.
% of Ni, from 0 to 1 wt. % of As, from 0 - 0.2 wt. % of Ag, from 0 -
1.2 wt. % of Cd, from 0 - 0.1 wt. % of Se, from 0 - 0.2 wt. % of Cr,
from 0 - 2 wt. % of Bi, from 0 - 5 wt. % of In, preferably with 0.1-1
wt. % of Zn or, however, also with
b) with>14 wt. % of Sb and up to 9 wt. % of Cu
optionally with further elements such as, for example: from 0 to 1 wt.
% of Ni, from 0 to 1 wt. % of As, from 0 - 0.2 wt. % of Ag, from 0 -

1.2 wt. % of Cd, from 0-0.1 wt. % of Se, from 0 - 0.2 wt. % of Cr,
from 0 - 2 wt. % of Bi, from 0 - 5 wt. % of In, preferably with 0.1-1
wt. % of Zn
c) with up to 14 wt. % of Sb and >9 wt. % of Cu,
optionally with further elements such as, for example: from 0 to 1 wt.
% of Ni, from 0 to 1 wt. % of As, from 0 - 0.2 wt. % of Ag, from 0 -
1.2 wt. % of Cd, from 0-0.1 wt. % of Se, from 0 - 0.2 wt. % of Cr,
from 0 -2 wt. % of Bi, from 0 - 5 wt. % of In, preferably with 0.1-1
wt. % of Zn
d) with > 14 wt. % of Sb and >9 wt. % of Cu
optionally, with further elements such as, for example: from 0 to 1 wt.
% of Ni, from 0 to 1 wt. % of As, from 0 - 0.2 wt. % of Ag, from 0 -
1.2 wt. % of Cd, from 0 - 0.1 wt. % of Se, from 0 - 0.2 wt. % of Cr,
from 0 - 2 wt. % of Bi, from 0 - 5 wt. % of In, preferably with 0.1-1
wt. % of Zn.
These are produced and used as coatings.
However, Sn-comprising metal coatings with a Cu-base and an Sn-content of
up to 20 wt. % or Sn-comprising metal coatings with an Al-base and Sn-
content of up to 23 wt. % can also be advantageous and more simply
applied, mostly with a marked improvement in quality. All these alloys can
optionally comprise further alloy elements in small amounts; optionally, they
can comprise composites, solid lubricants, and auxiliary welding agents.
Through this expansion of the coating material spectrum, a clear
improvement of the technological characteristics of the coating is possible
and an, until now, unacknowledged improvement in the Sn-comprising
heavy-duty coatings can be realized.
Previous risks for material inhomogeneity occurring during casting no longer
apply.

According to the patents DE 44 40 477 or EP 0717121, an improvement in
the technological data can be achieved for white metals through the
additional element Zn. This improvement refers not only to the pressure
resistance, but also to the creep strength. This means that Sn-comprising
materials with a Zn-supplement possess a particularly high geometric form
stability under extreme stress and, for this reason, comprise a high long-term
stress capacity- similar to the stress/strain - diagram of steel- the material
creeps less and therefore also has fewer plastic crack-free deformation in the
case of higher temperatures and pressure. As a result, its life span is
lengthened; the running surface, for example, can be decreased and
improved lifetimes and stress capacity, such as those characterizing materials
without Zn, can be attained. Additionally, when there are the same technical
properties, the installation space for each bearing can be markedly reduced.
Because practically every variation of the material composition can be
produced and processed as a powder, all materials with Sn, Al and Cu basis
can be used as long as they are all qualified as heavy-duty coatings. In this
way, composites that have markedly improved characteristics to the known
Sn-comprising coatings can also be laser welded. In the case of powder, this
can only consist of one material, the alloy, but also of various components
which result in a desired final composition.
Through supplementing with zn, the coating characteristics of the Sn-
comprising materials is further improved; long life spans can be achieved in
this way. The stress/strain diagram of the alloy changes itself and becomes
more steel-like; the material creeps less (plastic, crack-free deformation
caused by temperature and pressure). The less a material creeps, the longer
the life span of the corresponding heavy-duty coating.
With the casting process, the heavy-duty coatings which were lead free on
the basis of Sn, for example, could only employ up to 14 % of Sb and up to 9
% of Cu, preferably 12 % of Sb, 6 % of Cu - the more Sb and Cu, the more
load capacity. Through the new process, material compositions in the Sn/Cu-

system, which comprise considerably better characteristics, can be processed
simply, whereas through the previous method, they could not be processed.
As a result of composites now being able to be processed, it is now possible
to incorporate solid lubricants into the bearing metal layer and to improve its
characteristics in this way additionally.
In this way, a smooth transition between the Sn-casting alloys and copper
alloys can be produced with mixing ratios, wherein these materials are
exceptionally advantageous in various uses.
In the following, the invention is further detailed with the aid of
advantageous examples which the invention in no way restricts itself to.
Example 1:
Application of a coating through laser welding with a wire feed.
A laser welding machine a was operated with wire feed from SnSb8Cu4 under
protective gas. With this material, a steel support was coated. It formed a
smooth, adhering layer of a thickness of 3 mm out of many welded layers
that was machined thereafter. Higher-quality axial bearing segments for a
turbine could be produced more quickly and with less effort than through the
usual casting process.
Example 2:
Application of a coating through laser welding with a powder feed.
A laser welding machine with a powder composition of
SnSb12Cu6Zn0,6Ag0,1 was operated with protective gas. With this material,
a steel support material was coated through laser welding. It formed a
smooth, adhering layer of 1 mm. A higher-quality bearing layer could be
produced more quickly and with less effort than through the usual casting

process. As a result of avoiding the step of the wire feed, it is possible to use
less ductile materials which are not easily drawn on a wire, as starting
materials.
Example 3:
Application of a coating through laser welding with a powder feed.
On the coating shown detailed in example 2, a further layer with a thickness
of 3 mm was applied with changed welding parameters through one
operational step. A higher-quality thicker layer could also be produced more
quickly and with less effort than through the usual casting process. As a
result that the step of producing the wire was avoided, it is possible to add
greater material amounts continually at the same speed.
Even though the invention was described with the aid of advantageous
embodiment examples, it is apparent to the expert in the technical field that
various alternative embodiments exist so that the scope of protection of the
invention is bounded through the claims and not through the specific
description.

Claims
1. Sn-comprising heavy-duty material composition for coating of metal bases
having:
Sn: 0.6 - 91 wt. %
Al 75 - 94 wt. %
Cu 0.7 - 82 wt. %
Pb 0-27 wt. %
Sb 6-30 wt. %
Zn 0 - 2 wt. %
Ni 0 -1 wt. %
As 0 -1 wt. %
Ag 0 - 0.2 wt. %
Cd 0 -1.2 wt. %
Se 0-0.1 wt. %
Cr 0 - 0.2 wt. %
Bi 0 - 2 wt. %
In 0 - 5 wt. %
optionally hard materials, solid lubricants, auxiliary welding agents.
2. Sn-comprising heavy-duty material composition according to claim 1. having
Sn 40 - 91 wt. %
Cu 3-30 wt. %
Sb 6-30 wt. %
3. Sn-comprising heavy-duty material composition according to claim 2, having
Sn 61 - 83 wt. %
Cu 3 - 9 wt. %
Sb >14-30wt. %
Zn 0.1 - 1 wt. %
4. Sn-comprising heavy-duty material composition according to claim 2, having
Sn 56 - 85 wt. %
Cu >9 - 30 wt. %

Sb 6-14wt. %
Zn 0.1 - 1 wt. %
5. Sn-comprising heavy-duty material composition according to claim 2, comprising
Sn 40 - 77 wt. %
Cu >9 - 30 wt. %
Sb >14-30wt. %
Zn 0.1 - 1 wt. %.
6. Sn-comprising heavy-duty material composition according to claim 2, selected
from the group consisting of SnSb7Cu7Zn0.8; SnSb7Cu12Zn0.8;
SnSb7Cu18Zn0.8; SnSb12Cu6Zn0.8; SnSb12Cu12Zn0.8; SnSb12Cu18Zn0.8.
7. Sn-comprising heavy-duty material composition according to claim 1. having
Sn 0.6 - 20 wt. %
Cu 50 - 82 wt. %
Pb 0-27 wt. %
8. Sn-comprising Sn-comprising heavy-duty material composition claim 7, having
Sn 0.6 -11 wt. %
Cu 78 - 82 wt. %
Pb 9-27 wt. %
9. Sn-comprising heavy-duty material composition according to claim 7, selected
from the group consisting of SbSb8Cu4; CuPb10Sn10. CuPb17Sn5, CuPb25Sn4,
CuPb24Sn1
10. Sn-comprising heavy-duty material composition according to claim 1.
comprising
Sn 5-23 wt. %
Al 75 - 94 wt. %
Cu 0.7 - 2 wt. %
Ni 0.1-1.5 wt. %

11. Sn-comprising heavy-duty material composition claim 10. dadurch
gekennzeichnet, dass die Zusammensetzung ausgewählt ist aus der Gruppe
bestehend aus AISn20Cu, AISn6Cu
12. Sn-comprising heavy-duty material composition according to any one of the
preceding claims, characterized therein that it is in powder form - also in form of
a compressed powder
3. Method for the production of a heavy-duty coating comprising a composition
having
Sn 0.6 - 85 wt. %
Al 75 - 94 wt. %
Cu 0.7 - 82 wt. %
Pb 0-27 wt. %
Sb 6-30 wt. %
Zn 0 - 2 wt. %
Ni 0 -1 wt. %
As 0 -1 wt. %
Ag 0 - 0.2 wt. %
Cd 0-1.2wt. %
Se 0-0.1 wt. %
Cr 0 - 0.2 wt. %
Bi 0 - 2 wt. %
In 0 - 5 wt. %
optionally hard materials, solid lubricants, auxiliary welding agents und auxiliary
processing agents such as free-flowing agents and pressing agents, especially
according to any one of the preceding claims, comprising:
- providing a starting material of said composition;
- introducing starting material into a laser welding station;

- laser welding of one or more of the metal layers on a metal base by means
of a laser welding station; as well as
- optionally machining the heavy-duty coating which was produced in this
way.
14. method according to claim 13, characterized in that the laser welding station is
selected from the group consisting of laser powder welding stations and laser wire
welding stations.
15. method according to one of the previous claims, characterized in that the laser
welding takes place in protective gas environment.
16. Process according to claims 7-9, characterized in that one layer thickness of
0.05 to 3 mm is applied.
17. Use of the heavy-duty coating according to any one of the previous claims
as a heavy-duty coating on metal bases; bearings.

The invention relates to an Sn-containing heavy-duty material composition for coating
base metals. Said material composition comprises : 0.6 to 01 wt. % of Sn; 75 to 94 wt.
% of A1; 0.7 to 82 wt.% of Cu; 0 to 27 wt. % of Pb; 6 to 30 wt. % of Sb; 0 to 2 wt. %
of Zn; 0 to 1 wt. % of Ni; 0 to 1 wt. % of As; 0 to 0.2 wt. % of Ag; 0 to 1.2 wt. % of
Cd; 0 to 0.1 wt. % of Se; 0 to 0.2 wt. % of Cr; 0 to 2 wt % of Bi; 0 to 5 wt. % of In;
optional hardeners, solid lubricants, auxiliary welding agents. Also disclosed is a method
for producing a heavy-duty coating composed of 0.6 to 95 wt. % of Sn; 75 to 94 wt. %
of A1; 0.7 to 82 wt. % of Cu; 0 to 27 wt. % of Pb; 6 to 30 wt. % of Sb; 0 to 2 wt. % of
Zn; 0 to 1 wt. % of Ni; 0 to 1 wt. % of As; 0 to 0.2 wt. % of Ag; 0 to 1.2 wt. % of Cd;
0 to 0,1 wt. % of Se; 0 to 0.2 wt. % of Cr. 0 to 2 wt. % of Bi; 0 to 5 wt. % of In,
optional hardeners, solid lubricants, auxiliary welding agents, and auxiliary processing
agents such as free-flowing agents, pressing agents. According to the inventive
method, an input stock of said composition of provided, the input stock is introduced
into a laser welding station, one or several metal layers are laser-welded onto a base
metal by means of the laser welding station, and the obtained heavy-duty coating is
optionally finished. The invention finally relates to the use of said coating as a heavy-
duty coating on base metals, bearing.

Documents:

http://ipindiaonline.gov.in/patentsearch/GrantedSearch/viewdoc.aspx?id=CoQD+RDXiAZ0aPRIj+WpHQ==&loc=wDBSZCsAt7zoiVrqcFJsRw==


Patent Number 269948
Indian Patent Application Number 2354/KOLNP/2008
PG Journal Number 47/2015
Publication Date 20-Nov-2015
Grant Date 19-Nov-2015
Date of Filing 11-Jun-2008
Name of Patentee ECKA GRANULATE GMBH & CO.KG.
Applicant Address KAISERSTR. 30, 90763 FURTH
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 KORING, ROLF HONINGSTR. 41A 41363 JUCHEN
PCT International Classification Number C22C 13/00,C22C 9/01
PCT International Application Number PCT/EP2006/063159
PCT International Filing date 2006-06-13
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 10 2005 059 544.8 2005-12-13 Germany