Published August 26, 2025 | Version 1.0
Journal Open

Pulse-Driven Surface Hardening and Advanced Electrospark Alloying for Maritime Applications

  • 1. ROR icon Pavlo Tychyna Uman State Pedagogical University
  • 2. Schmidt Institute of Physics of the Earth
  • 3. ROR icon Odessa National Maritime University
  • 4. Государственный университет инфраструктуры и технологий (ранее: Государственный экономико-технологический университет транспорта)
  • 5. ROR icon Brno University of Technology
  • 6. ROR icon Charles University

Description

This study examines advanced electrospark alloying (ESA) as a pulse-driven surface hard ening technique for marine engineering components operating in corrosive and abrasive en vironments. Coatings were deposited using cobalt-based (Stellite 6), nickel-based (NiCrBSi), titanium-based (VT1-0), and boron-based (B4C) electrodes, with pulse energies of 0.2–0.5 J, discharge frequencies of 100–200 Hz, electrode feed rates of 5–8 mm/min, applied loads of 15–20 N, and treatment durations of 40–60 s. The effects of processing parameters on coating microstructure, adhesion strength, microhardness, corrosion resistance, and wear behaviour were systematically evaluated. ESA treatments increased microhardness by 35–48% and adhesion strength by 22–30%, while reducing the corrosion rate from 0.043 mm/year to 0.025–0.027 mm/year and lowering wear volume loss by 40–47%. Com pared with high-velocity oxy-fuel (HVOF) spraying and laser hardening, ESA achieved 37–58% lower energy consumption and 40–70% lower CO2 emissions. These findings highlight ESA as an energy-efficient and environmentally sustainable option for on-site maintenance and modernisation of maritime equipment.

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Pulse-Driven Surface Hardening and Advanced Electrospark.pdf

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Additional details

Funding

Ministry of Education Youth and Sports
Programme Johannes Amos Comenius