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| United States Patent |
5,338,432 |
| Agarwala , et al. |
August 16, 1994 |
Corrosivity sensor
Abstract
A lightweight corrosivity sensor is provided which is thin enough to be edded
between the layers of a composite structure or placed on a surface beneath a
coating. It comprises a thin non-conductive base and two electrically isolated
conductive elements fixed to the surface thereof. Each conductive element
comprises a bus bar and a plurality of strips extending from the bus bar and
interdigitated with the strips of the other conductive element. The corrosivity
sensor is connectable to a current measuring means for measuring the current
across the two conductive elements as an indicator of the presence of a
corrosive environment. A masking method of manufacturing such a sensor is also
provided.
| Inventors: |
Agarwala; Vinod S. (Warminster, PA);
Pearlstein; Fred (Philadelphia, PA) |
| Assignee: |
The United States of America as represented
by the Secretary of the Navy (Washington, DC) |
| Appl. No.: |
087237 |
| Filed: |
June 30, 1993 |
| Current U.S. Class: |
205/118; 204/404; 205/123
|
| Intern'l Class: |
C25D 005/02 |
| Field of Search: |
205/118,123 204/153.11,404
|
References Cited [Referenced
By]
U.S. Patent Documents
| 4755744 |
Jul., 1988 |
Moore et al. |
204/404. |
| 4780664 |
Oct., 1988 |
Ansuini et al. |
204/404. |
| 4994159 |
Feb., 1991 |
Agarwala et al. |
204/153. |
| 5120421 |
Jun., 1992 |
Glass et al. |
204/406. |
Primary
Examiner: Niebling; John
Assistant Examiner: Mayekar; Kishor
Attorney, Agent or Firm: Tura; James V., Bechtel; James B., Verona;
Susan E.
Goverment Interests
STATEMENT OF GOVERNMENT INTEREST
The invention described herein
may be manufactured and used by and for the Government of the United States of
America for governmental purposes without the payment of any royalties thereon
or therefor.
Parent Case Text
This application is a division of application Ser. No. 07/942,914, filed
Sep. 10, 1992
Claims
What is claimed is:
1. A method of making a corrosivity sensor
having a relatively thin non-conductive base with a first conductive element
fixed thereto and a second conductive element fixed thereto, the second
conductive element being electrically isolated from the first conductive
element, comprising the steps of:
providing the relatively thin
non-conductive base with a thin copper layer bonded thereto;
applying
resist to shield two distinct areas of the copper layer while leaving the
remainder of the copper layer unshielded, the first distinct area comprising a
bus bar and a plurality of strips extending therefrom, and the second distinct
area comprising a bus bar and a plurality of strips extending therefrom, and
being interdigitated with the strips of the first distinct area;
removing the unshielded remainder of the copper layer;
removing
the resist to expose the two distinct areas of the copper layer;
electrodepositing a first conductive material onto the first distinct
area of the copper layer forming the first conductive element of the corrosivity
sensor; and
electrodepositing a second conductive material onto the
second distinct area of the copper layer forming the second conductive element
of the corrosivity sensor.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the resist
is applied using masking techniques.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein
the resist is photoresist and is applied using photographic imaging.
4.
The method of claim 1, wherein the resist is applied using silk screening.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the first conductive material is gold.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein the second conductive material is
zinc.
7. A method of making a corrosivity sensor for use on a substrate,
the sensor having a non-conductive base with a first conductive element fixed
thereto and a second conductive element fixed thereto, the second conductive
element being electrically isolated from the first conductive element,
comprising the steps of:
providing a metal sheet;
applying
resist to one side of the metal sheet on all but a first area of the metal
sheet;
electrodepositing a first conductive material onto the first area
of the metal sheet to form the first conductive element;
applying resist
to shield the first conductive element;
removing resist to expose only a
second area of the metal sheet;
electrodepositing a second conductive
material onto the second area of the metal sheet to form the second conductive
element;
removing the remaining resist to leave the first and second
conductive elements fixed to the metal sheet;
applying a film of
adhesive to the substrate to form the non-conductive base;
applying the
electrodeposited side of the metal sheet to the adhesive film to contact the
first and second conductive elements with the adhesive film; and
removing the metal sheet to leave the first and second conductive
elements fixed to the adhesive film thereby forming a corrosivity sensor on the
substrate.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates generally to
a corrosivity sensor and a method for its manufacture, and more particularly to
a corrosivity sensor which is light enough for aircraft applications and thin
enough for use in laminated composites and under coatings, and which is
manufactured using masking techniques.
The destructive effects of
corrosion are well known and efforts to minimize those effects are ongoing. The
non-nuclear naval aircraft-carrier environment is a particularly corrosive one,
with sulfur from aircraft-carrier stack gases combining with sea spray to
provide a hostile environment which undermines the structural integrity of naval
aircraft. Sensors for early detection of the presence of corrosive elements
beneath coatings and between the layers of laminated composites would prompt
early aircraft maintenance and repair and prevent disaster as well as save time
and money.
Galvanic cell-type corrosion probes are currently used to
determine the corrosivity of a surrounding medium. One such probe is disclosed
in U.S. Pat. No. 4,994,159 to Agarwala et al. This kind of probe has been used
on naval aircraft carriers to monitor the corrosivity of the sea environment due
to moisture and salt. In operation, a thin film of water from the environment in
question, usually in the form of sea spray, contacts the surface of the probe,
acting as an electrolyte to complete the galvanic cell formed by two dissimilar
metals exposed at the surface. In other words, this film of water acts as a
pathway for current flow between the surfaces of the dissimilar metals. The
probe is made by embedding within a matrix of insulating material a plurality of
plates of alternately anodic and cathodic material, and then exposing the edges
of the plates to form the surface. The probe's large size and heavy weight limit
its usefulness in applications where space and weight are critical issues, such
as on aircraft, and, in particular, within the composite layers of aircraft or
on aircraft surfaces to be painted. The large size of this probe also limits its
sensitivity because it will only detect the presence of electrolytic films which
are large enough in area to bridge the gap between the exposed metals.
Additionally, since this probe is made by exposing the edges of flat plates of
anodic and cathodic material, the surface pattern thus formed is limited to
straight-line strips. The probe is therefore not sensitive to the presence of a
film spreading along the insulating surface between strips and parallel thereto.
Masking techniques have been used to manufacture printed circuit boards,
but have not been applied to the formation of corrosivity sensors.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is therefore an object of the
present invention to provide a lightweight corrosivity sensor suitable for use
on an aircraft. It is another object to provide a corrosivity sensor which is
thin enough to be embedded between the layers of a composite structure or placed
on a surface beneath a coating. It is still another object to provide a highly
sensitive sensor which can quantitatively measure corrosivity. It is yet another
object to provide early detection of a corrosive environment. It is also an
object to provide an inexpensive method of manufacturing a thin, lightweight
corrosivity sensor.
Briefly, these and other objects of the invention
are accomplished by a corrosivity sensor comprising a thin non-conductive base
and two electrically isolated conductive elements fixed to the surface thereof.
Each conductive element comprises a bus bar and a plurality of strips extending
from the bus bar. The strips of the two conductive elements are interdigitated.
The corrosivity sensor is connectable to a means for measuring the current
across the two conductive elements as an indicator of the presence of a
corrosive environment. Masking techniques are used in the manufacture of the
sensors.
These and other objects, advantages, and novel features of the
invention will become apparent from the following detailed description of the
invention when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings wherein:
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIGS. 1a, 1b, and 1c are
schematic diagrams of different embodiments of the corrosivity sensor of the
present invention.
FIG. 2 is a diagrammatic view of the corrosivity
sensor of the present invention showing the current measuring means.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
The present invention
provides a sensor for detecting and measuring corrosivity, which sensor is thin
enough to be used in situ either between the layers of a laminated composite or
on the surface of a structure, either exposed to the environment or beneath a
coating. The sensor is connectable to a means for measuring current as an
indicator of the presence of corrosive elements in the immediate environment.
Masking methods of manufacturing such a sensor are also provided.
Referring now to the drawings wherein like characters designate like or
corresponding parts throughout the several views, one sees in FIGS. 1a, 1b, and
1c diagrammatic views of three embodiments of a corrosivity sensor 10 of the
present invention. A thin non-conductive base 12 of insulating material has
fixed to its surface 14 two very thin conductive elements 16a and 16b
electrically isolated from one another. Sensor 10 is connected to a
current-measuring means 18 via wires 20a and 20b connected to elements 16a and
16b, respectively. The presence of moisture which contains corrosive elements is
detected by monitoring current between conductive elements 16a and 16b when a
film of the moisture contacts both elements on surface 14.
Non-conductive base 12 may be fabricated of any non-conducting material
which is dimensionally stable and non-porous and which will not dissolve under
processing conditions. Base 12 should be as thin as possible, its thinness being
limited only by what thickness can withstand processing conditions and remain
dimensionally stable. For example, base 12 may be a thin film or sheet of Kapton
(Dupont), a polyimide which is available in sheets as thin as 0.3 mil thick, or
glass-epoxy composite sheets, which are available as thin as 2 mils thick. In
one embodiment of corrosivity sensor 10 of the present invention base 12 is an
adhesive which can be fixed to any flat or gently curved substrate of interest.
Conductive elements 16a and 16b are fixed to the adhesive layer. Such a sensor
10 may be applied like a decal to the substrate.
Each conductive element
16 is a very thin continuous layer of conductive material and comprises a bus
bar 22 which commonly connects a series or plurality of strips 24 which extend
therefrom. Strips 24 are preferably essentially parallel. Bus bars 22a and 22b
also connect to wires 20a and 20b, respectively. Strips 24a and 24b of elements
16a and 16b are interdigitated so that the strips alternate between those of one
conductive element and those of the other. Strips 24a and 24b can form any
interdigitated pattern on surface 14, such as essentially parallel straight
lines, as shown in FIG. 1a. A preferred pattern has essentially parallel strips
24 that form a rotationally symmetric geometric pattern, such as the concentric
circles of FIG. 1b or the hexagonals of FIG. 1c. Of course, as shown in FIGS. 1b
and 1c, strips 24 do not form closed circles or hexagonals, since elements 16a
and 16b must be electrically isolated from each other. These rotationally
symmetric configurations are preferred because they allow the moisture film to
spread in any direction and still bridge the gap between elements 16a and 16b.
This omnidirectionality makes sensor 10 insensitive to tilt, an important
feature if it is to be used on aircraft. Strips 24a and 24b are preferably all
of the same width and essentially equally spaced one from the next. The
sensitivity of sensor 10 increases with the number of strips 24 per unit area
and with decreasing distance therebetween. As an example, strips 24a and 24b may
be less than 30 mils wide and less than 15 mils apart. Ten mil wide strips 24
spaced 3.5 mils apart have been found to be effective in detecting even very
minor amounts of moisture and corrosive elements.
The optimum thickness
of elements 16 balances the need for sensor 10 to be very thin so that it can be
used under coatings or between the layers of a composite material, and the need
for sensor 10 to be durable and have a useful lifespan. Processing conditions
also limit how thin elements 16 can be. Elements as thin as 0.6 mil are
achievable.
Surface 14 of base 12 should be hydrophilic, particularly
when the distance between strips 24 is greater than 5 mils, so that moisture
films will tend to be continuous as opposed to being isolated microdroplets. A
hydrophilic surface 14 may be achieved by carefully cleaning the surface or by
treating the surface with surfactants.
Conductive elements 16a and 16b
may be of dissimilar materials, one acting as an anode and the other acting as a
cathode, so that the presence of an electrolyte will generate galvanic current,
the magnitude of which will be indicative of the corrosivity of the electrolyte
or environment. The selection of materials may be governed by their relative
electrochemical potentials or by what specific corrosive elements are being
detected. The metals may also be selected to closely reflect the objects being
corroded. One useful embodiment employs gold and zinc as the cathode and anode,
respectively, a combination which is very sensitive to the presence of small
amounts of moisture. Even moisture generated from breathing on such a gold-zinc
sensor is detectable. Of various combinations studied, the gold-zinc combination
for conductive elements 16a and 16b was found most reproducible and responsive
to humidity changes during long-term exposure; it provided a relatively high
current output (a few microamperes) even in less than 80% relative humidity.
Other useful metal combinations include gold-iron, copper-zinc, gold-copper,
tin-iron, nickel-chromium, and gold-cadmium.
To measure the corrosion
current generated between elements 16a and 16b when of dissimilar metals, wires
20a and 20b connect bus bars 22a and 22b to current measuring means 18. Current
measuring means 18 may be any means for measuring relatively small amounts of
current, the smaller the current that can be measured the more sensitive the
device to the first signs of corrosion. For example, as shown in FIG. 2, current
measuring means 18 may be a zero resistance ammeter comprising a potentiostat 26
in which the potential between the working (w) and the counter (c) terminals
thereof are adjusted to zero. A standard resistance box 28 is connected between
the reference (r) and the counter (c) terminals to convert the current into a
potential drop for amplification and recording. Current variations of up to
three orders of magnitude can be recorded easily with such an arrangement
without significantly changing the resistance between the reference (r) and the
counter (c) terminals. A 100-kohm resistor is adequate to measure current in the
range of 0.01 to 10 mA. Using sensitive measuring means allows current to be
measured, indicating the onset of corrosion, long before any visible signs of
corrosion would be present.
Means may be operatively connected to the
output of current measuring means 20 to measure the quantity of electricity
produced (coulombs), and the amount of anodic material corroding can be
calculated by Faraday's law using the known value of anodic surface area. Means
may also be incorporated for calculating the corrosion rate in mass per surface
area of anodic material corroding and for calculating the corrosion rate over
time. All such calculating means are known to those skilled in the art.
In another application of sensor 10 of the present invention both
conductive elements 16 are made of the same material. In this case the presence
of an electrolytic film is measured by applying a voltage across elements 16a
and 16b and then measuring the current therebetween in order to ascertain the
resistance therebetween, which is a function of the corrosivity or conductivity
of the electrolytic film. The more corrosive the moisture is, the lower the
measured resistance will be.
The present invention provides the
following method of manufacturing the sensor according to the invention. A layer
of non-conductive material, such as 1-mil thick Kapton or 10-mil thick
glass-epoxy sheet, is provided as base 12. A layer of copper, such as copper
foil 0.35 to 1.4 mils thick, is applied, such as by adhesively bonding with heat
and pressure, to base 12. Alternatively, a thin non-conductive film may be
coated directly with a layer of electroless copper 0.05 to 0.1 mil thick by
autocatalytic chemical reduction deposition. Masking techniques are used to
apply resist to selected areas of the copper layer. For example, photoresist may
be applied to the copper layer and photographic imaging used so that the
photoresist remains over only two areas of the copper layer where elements 16
will be. The exposed, unwanted, copper is then dissolved away chemically, after
which the remaining photoresist is removed, leaving two electrically isolated
thin copper elements corresponding to conductive elements 16. Electrical contact
is then made with one of the copper elements, and the selected metal, such as
gold, is electrodeposited thereupon. A nickel electrodeposit may be interposed
between the copper and the gold to serve as a diffusion barrier. In the
preferred embodiment, 0.05- to 0.1-mil thick nickel and 0.03- to 0.08-mil thick
gold are applied. Electrical contact is then made with the other copper element,
which is electrodeposited with the other selected metal, such as zinc, to a
thickness of preferably between 0.5 and 1.5 mils. Preferably, the more anodic of
the two dissimilar metals is deposited to a greater thickness than the other.
The zinc element may first be electrodeposited with nickel and gold, if desired.
In an alternative process, the photoresist can be photographically
developed so that copper is exposed only where elements 16 are to be fixed. The
exposed areas are then electrodeposited with first nickel and then gold. The
photoresist is removed and the newly-exposed copper is dissolved away, leaving
two gold conductive elements 16 on non-conductive surface 14. One of conductive
elements 16 may then be contacted electrically and electrodeposited with zinc.
The above-described photographic imaging method can be used to produce a
sensor 10 with very close and narrow strips 24, and is therefore the preferred
method. However, other masking techniques, such as silk screening with stripping
resist, may be used to provide a pattern of copper in the desired location on
base 12.
A corrosivity sensor 10 having an adhesive as base 12 can be
made in the following manner on a stainless steel foil or any other metal foil
upon which electrodeposits do not adhere firmly. Using masking techniques, the
metal foil is covered with resist except for an area to become conductive
element 16a. The exposed metal foil is then electrodeposited with gold, 0.08 to
0.1 mil in thickness, to form conductive element 16a. Conductive element 16a is
then covered with resist, and, using masking techniques, the metal foil is
exposed at the area to become conductive element 16b. This area is
electrodeposited with zinc, 0.1 to 0.2 mil in thickness, to form conductive
element 16b. The resist is then removed chemically to leave only conductive
elements 16 on the metal foil. The electrodeposited side of the foil is applied
to an adhesive film or layer upon the substrate of interest. Conductive elements
16 will adhere more firmly to the adhesive layer than to the metal foil, so the
foil is then peeled off, leaving conductive elements 16 bonded to the adhesive,
which forms base 12. Wires 20a and 20b can be applied to conductive elements 16
using conductive epoxy cement or similar material.
When a sensor 10
according to the invention using gold and zinc as conductive elements 16a and
16b was coated with polyurethane aircraft paint and exposed to 100 percent
relative humidity, initial current flow was less than one nanoampere, which
increased to over 10 nanoamperes after about 130 hours of exposure. When another
such sensor was coated with a 5-mil polyurethane paint film and exposed to five
percent NaCl salt spray, the currents recorded were in the nanoamperes range up
to approximately 500 hours, and thereafter the current steadily increased until
it reached a near plateau value of over 5000 nanoamperes after 750 hours of
exposure. This threshhold is an indicator of paint failure and initiation of
substrate corrosion.
Some of the many advantages and novel features of
the invention should now be readily apparent. A lightweight and highly sensitive
corrosivity sensor is provided which is thin enough to be embedded between the
layers of a composite component or placed on a surface beneath its coating
without affecting the mechanical and functional properties of the component or
coating. Furthermore, an inexpensive method of manufacturing such a thin,
light-weight corrosivity sensor has been provided.
Other embodiments and
modifications of the present invention may readily come to those of ordinary
skill in the art having the benefit of the teachings presented in the foregoing
description and drawings. Therefore, it is to be understood that the present
invention is not to be limited to such teachings presented, and that such
further embodiments and modifications are intended to be included within the
scope of the appended claims.
* * * * *
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