EP0264455A1 - Plated steel excellent in coatability - Google Patents

Plated steel excellent in coatability Download PDF

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Publication number
EP0264455A1
EP0264455A1 EP87902156A EP87902156A EP0264455A1 EP 0264455 A1 EP0264455 A1 EP 0264455A1 EP 87902156 A EP87902156 A EP 87902156A EP 87902156 A EP87902156 A EP 87902156A EP 0264455 A1 EP0264455 A1 EP 0264455A1
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EP
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Prior art keywords
coating
alloy
plated steel
plating
upper layer
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EP87902156A
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German (de)
French (fr)
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EP0264455A4 (en
EP0264455B1 (en
Inventor
Taisuke Irie
Junichi Kotegawa
Koichi Watanabe
Satoshi Hukuda
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Nippon Steel Nisshin Co Ltd
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Nisshin Steel Co Ltd
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Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C23COATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; CHEMICAL SURFACE TREATMENT; DIFFUSION TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL; INHIBITING CORROSION OF METALLIC MATERIAL OR INCRUSTATION IN GENERAL
    • C23CCOATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; SURFACE TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL BY DIFFUSION INTO THE SURFACE, BY CHEMICAL CONVERSION OR SUBSTITUTION; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL
    • C23C28/00Coating for obtaining at least two superposed coatings either by methods not provided for in a single one of groups C23C2/00 - C23C26/00 or by combinations of methods provided for in subclasses C23C and C25C or C25D
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C23COATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; CHEMICAL SURFACE TREATMENT; DIFFUSION TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL; INHIBITING CORROSION OF METALLIC MATERIAL OR INCRUSTATION IN GENERAL
    • C23CCOATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; SURFACE TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL BY DIFFUSION INTO THE SURFACE, BY CHEMICAL CONVERSION OR SUBSTITUTION; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL
    • C23C28/00Coating for obtaining at least two superposed coatings either by methods not provided for in a single one of groups C23C2/00 - C23C26/00 or by combinations of methods provided for in subclasses C23C and C25C or C25D
    • C23C28/02Coating for obtaining at least two superposed coatings either by methods not provided for in a single one of groups C23C2/00 - C23C26/00 or by combinations of methods provided for in subclasses C23C and C25C or C25D only coatings only including layers of metallic material
    • C23C28/023Coating for obtaining at least two superposed coatings either by methods not provided for in a single one of groups C23C2/00 - C23C26/00 or by combinations of methods provided for in subclasses C23C and C25C or C25D only coatings only including layers of metallic material only coatings of metal elements only
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C23COATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; CHEMICAL SURFACE TREATMENT; DIFFUSION TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL; INHIBITING CORROSION OF METALLIC MATERIAL OR INCRUSTATION IN GENERAL
    • C23CCOATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; SURFACE TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL BY DIFFUSION INTO THE SURFACE, BY CHEMICAL CONVERSION OR SUBSTITUTION; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL
    • C23C28/00Coating for obtaining at least two superposed coatings either by methods not provided for in a single one of groups C23C2/00 - C23C26/00 or by combinations of methods provided for in subclasses C23C and C25C or C25D
    • C23C28/02Coating for obtaining at least two superposed coatings either by methods not provided for in a single one of groups C23C2/00 - C23C26/00 or by combinations of methods provided for in subclasses C23C and C25C or C25D only coatings only including layers of metallic material
    • C23C28/023Coating for obtaining at least two superposed coatings either by methods not provided for in a single one of groups C23C2/00 - C23C26/00 or by combinations of methods provided for in subclasses C23C and C25C or C25D only coatings only including layers of metallic material only coatings of metal elements only
    • C23C28/025Coating for obtaining at least two superposed coatings either by methods not provided for in a single one of groups C23C2/00 - C23C26/00 or by combinations of methods provided for in subclasses C23C and C25C or C25D only coatings only including layers of metallic material only coatings of metal elements only with at least one zinc-based layer
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C25ELECTROLYTIC OR ELECTROPHORETIC PROCESSES; APPARATUS THEREFOR
    • C25DPROCESSES FOR THE ELECTROLYTIC OR ELECTROPHORETIC PRODUCTION OF COATINGS; ELECTROFORMING; APPARATUS THEREFOR
    • C25D5/00Electroplating characterised by the process; Pretreatment or after-treatment of workpieces
    • C25D5/10Electroplating with more than one layer of the same or of different metals

Definitions

  • This invention relates to a plated steel sheet excellent in the appearance of a coating when applied in such a use that cationic electrodeposition coating is carried out as in the case of components for automobile bodies.
  • a double-layer plated steel sheet wherein an Fe coating that can achieve a good electrodeposition coating performance is further applied on a pure Zn or Zn alloy coating.
  • Conventionally known steel sheets of this type may include those wherein an upper layer comprises an Fe-Zn alloy coating having Fe content of 60 to 90 wt.%, and those wherein an upper layer comprises an Fe coating, and it is true that the application of the cationic electrodeposition coating on these double-layer plated steel sheets may result in generation of a decreased number of craterings on a coating film and can improve the coating appearance.
  • the coating weight must be made not less than 5 g/m 2 (per one side), necessarily resulting in higher production cost.
  • this Fe alloy coating is so hard and brittle that an infinite number of crack may be formed when a plated steel sheet is worked into a component, with the result that the lower layer is exposed at the cracked portion. Therefore, when the electrodeposition coating is carried out, it follows that the electrodeposition coating is directly applied on the lower layer, and also that craterings are liable to be generated on the coating film.
  • the variation factor has not been made clear, this is presumably because the covering rate in the upper layer coating relative to the lower layer coating is so poor, or the purity of the upper layer coating is so high, that large crystals of phosphate may tend to be formed during phosphating which is a pre-treatment for the electrodeposition coating, and, as a result, the rate of covering by the phosphate crystals on the surface of a coating may be lowered and also the variation in the covering rate may be caused to bring about a difference in the electrolytic conduction for electrodeposition coating, between the phosphate-deposited portion and non-deposited portion. Therefore, in order to lessen the generation of craterings on a coating film by providing the Fe coating, the coating weight must be 3 g/m 2 (per one side), also necessarily resulting in higher production cost.
  • this invention aims at providing a plated steel sheet that has been improved the electrodeposition coating performance and yet can achieve lower production cost.
  • This invention provides a plated steel sheet which is comprised of a plated steel sheet comprising a lower layer coating of pure Zn or a Zn alloy, provided on a steel sheet, and an upper layer coating of boron(B)-containing Fe or an Fe-Zn alloy having a boron-containing Fe percentage of 50 wt.% or more, provided on said lower layer coating, thereby making it possible to prevent craterings being generated on a coating film and lessen the upper layer coating weight.
  • the reason why the plated steel sheet of this invention can have an excellent electrodeposition coating performance is presumed to be that the presence of boron added to a bath at the time of the plating for the upper layer can improve the uniformity of the electrodeposition to give a uniform coating, and also that the boron contained in the upper layer can serve as a nucleus at the time of the deposition of phosphate when a phosphating is applied as a pre-treatment for the electrodeposition coating, to form a fine and dense phosphate coating, and, as a result, the electrolytic conduction on the entire surface of a steel sheet becomes uniform, whereby a coating material can be uniformly electrodeposited at the time the electrodeposition coating is carried out, and thus the generation of craterings can be stably restrained.
  • the plated steel sheet of this invention can restrain the generation of craterings in a coating film even when the coating weight is not more than 3 g/m 2 per one side in the case the upper layer comprises the boron-containing Fe coating, or even when the coating weight is not more than 5 g/m 2 per one side in the case the upper layer comprises the above element-containing Fe alloy coating. This is presumably because, even if the coating weight is small, the upper layer can cover the lower layer so excellently that the rate of covering of the lower layer by the upper layer can be improved.
  • the upper layer comprises the Fe-Zn alloy coating
  • Fe content is controlled to 60 to less than 100 wt.%.
  • the presence of boron contained makes it possible to lessen the generation of craterings in a coating film even if Fe content is decreased to 50 to less than 100 wt.%. This is presumably because of the above mentioned effect of improving the phosphating performance, and once the Fe content can be decreased like this, the difference in the corrosion potential between the upper layer and the lower layer becomes small, whereby the corrosion resistance of the coatings as a whole for a long period can be improved.
  • the amount of boron contained in the upper layer may preferably be controlled to 0.001 to 3 wt.%. This ia because the boron amount of less than 0.001 wt.% may result in no difference from an upper layer containing no boron in respect of the generation of craterings and variation thereof in the electrodeposition coating, and the boron amount more than 3 wt.% may result in saturation of the effect so that it is meaningless to make the amount larger than that.
  • the covering weight on the upper layer may be preferably controlled to 0.5 to 10 g/m 2 in the case of the boron-containing Fe coating, and 0.2 to 8 g/m 2 in the case of the Fe alloy coating. This is because the weight of less than 0.5 g/m or 0.2 g/m 2 may make it impossible to achieve perfect covering of the lower layer to bring about the generation of craterings in a coating film to be caused by the exposure of the lower layer at the time of the electrodeposition coating, and the weight more than 10 g/m 2 or 8 g/m 2 may result in saturation of the effect of restraining the generation of craterings in a coating film so that it is unnecessary to make the coating weight larger than that.
  • the plating may be carried out by adding one or more of boron compound(s) such as boric acid, metaboric acid, water soluble metaborate, water soluble tetraborate and tetrafluoroborate to an ordinary Fe plating bath or a plating bath of an Fe alloy such as an Fe-Zn alloy and an Fe-Ni alloy, and adjusting the pH of the bath to 1 to 3.
  • boron compound(s) such as boric acid, metaboric acid, water soluble metaborate, water soluble tetraborate and tetrafluoroborate
  • the steel sheet according to this invention can improve the performance in the electrodeposition coating of a pure Zn-plated or Zn alloy-plated steel sheet.
  • the lower layer comprises an Zn alloy coating of a Zn-Ni or Zn-Fe alloy
  • the generation of craterings can be restrained even with inclusion of a trace amount of one or more of elements such as Ni (in respect of the Zn-Fe alloy), Fe (in respect of the Zn-Ni alloy), Co, Cr, Mn, Mo and Ti.
  • the lower layer comprises a pure Zn coating, it can be also restrained even with respect to coatings obtained by carrying out electroplating, vacuum deposition or hot dipping.
  • the upper layer comprises the Zn alloy coating
  • it can be also restrained even with respect, in addition to the coatings formed by the above methods, to those which are alloyed into a Zn-Fe alloy by thermal diffusion after carrying out hot dip zinc coating or vacuum zinc deposition as in the case of an alloyed zinc-plated steel sheet.
  • the steel sheets of this invention provided with an Fe-B coating as the upper layer, show less generation of craterings and variation thereof than those in conventional double-layer plated steel sheets provided with an upper layer Zn coating and having a good electrodeposition coating performance, even with a lower layer comprising a pure Zn coating or a Zn alloy coating.
  • a cold rolled steel sheet of 0.8 mm thick was treated in the same manner as in Example 1 to make its surface clean. Thereafter, a lower layer coating comprising a Zn-Fe alloy or a Zn-Ni alloy was first provided under the conditions as shown in Table 3, and next an upper layer coating comprising a boron containing Fe-Zn alloy or a boron-free Fe-Zn alloy was provided on it.
  • a steel strip of 0.6 mm thick and 300 mm wide was reduced in a pre-treatment oven of a gas reduction system, and thereafter passed through a pressurizing chamber for preventing inflow of gas or air and a seal roll chamber in which pressure is stepwise reduced by means of a number of seal rolls, and then introduced into a first vacuum deposition chamber equipped with a vacuum deposition Zn bath of an electrical resistance heating system at a lower side of the position of the steel strip, to apply a deposition coating of pure Zn on one side of the steel strip.
  • the steel strip was guided to a second vacuum deposition chamber disposed at a lower side of the above first vacuum deposition chamber and having the same construction as the first vacuum deposition chamber to apply a deposition coating of pure Zn on the opposite side of the steel strip, and thereafter passed through a seal roll chamber and a pressurizing chamber to produce a deposited steel strip having a coating weight of 50 g/m 2 (per one side).
  • the plating was carried out under the conditions of a steel strip moving speed of 15 m/min and a vacuum degree of 0.01 Torr in both the first and second vacuum deposition chambers.
  • part of the pure Zn-plated steel strip thus produced was introduced in an oven having an atmosphere of a mixed gas (dew point: -25°C) comprising 3 % of H 2 and 97 % of N 2' and heated to 280 0 C to form the coating into a Zn-Fe alloy, thereby producing a steel strip provided with a coating of a Zn-Fe alloy having an Fe percentage of 10 wt.%.
  • a mixed gas dew point: -25°C
  • this Zn-Fe alloy-plated steel strip and the pure Zn-plated steel strip were subjected to electroplating to respectively provide a Fe coating or a Fe-B coating under the same conditions as those for the upper layer coating shown in Table 1, and a boron-containing high Fe-Zn coating under the same conditions as those for the upper layer coating shown in Table 3, followed by carrying out electrodeposition coating under the same conditions as in Example 1.
  • the states of generation of craterings in the coating film are shown in Table 5 and Table 6.
  • the plated steel sheet according to this invention can achieve a good coating appearance when used not only in automobile body components but also in other components such as electrical equipment components for domestic use and construction components on which the electrodeposition coating is carried out. Since also having an excellent coating performance for coating materials other than the coating materials for the electrodeposition, the present steel sheet can be also applied in such a use for general coating.

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  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Materials Engineering (AREA)
  • Metallurgy (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Electrochemistry (AREA)
  • Electroplating Methods And Accessories (AREA)
  • Other Surface Treatments For Metallic Materials (AREA)
  • Electroplating And Plating Baths Therefor (AREA)
  • Laminated Bodies (AREA)

Abstract

A plated steel excellent in coatability which is produced by forming, on the surface of steel plated with pure Zn or Zn alloy, a B (boron)-containing Fe plating or a B-containing Fe-Zn alloy (50 wt % or more in Fe content) plating. The B-containing Fe or Fe-Zn alloy plating serves to stably prevent formation of craters in coating such as electrodeposition coating. The thus plated steel can be used as automobile body materials instead of one having a single-layer pure Zn or Zn alloy (e.g., Zn-Fe alloy, Zn-Ni alloy, etc) plating which has suffered formation of craters during electrodeposition. The content of B in the Fe plating or Fe-Zn alloy plating is preferably 0.001 to 3 wt %, and the amount of plating is preferably 0.5 to 10 g/m2 (per side) with the Fe plating and 0.2 to 8 g/m2 (per side) with the Fe-Zn alloy plating.

Description

    Technical field
  • This invention relates to a plated steel sheet excellent in the appearance of a coating when applied in such a use that cationic electrodeposition coating is carried out as in the case of components for automobile bodies.
  • Backaround art
  • In North America, Canada, North Europe and elsewhere, rock salt is sprayed in winter for preventing roads being freezed, and therefore steel sheets used for the components of automobile bodies are required to have excellent corrosion-resisting performance. For this reason, in such a use, there have been recently aplied pure zinc-plated steel sheets or zinc alloy-plated steel sheets (for example, Zn-Fe alloy-plated steel sheets, Zn-Ni alloy-plated steel sheets, and so forth) having excellent corrosion resistance.
  • However, there has been a problem that, in the case of a single-layer coating, these plated steel sheets may bear craterings generated on a coating film when the cationic electrodeposition coating is carried out after phosphating, to give poor appearance of the coating.
  • Now, as a steel sheet that has solved the problem of the coating appearance, a double-layer plated steel sheet has been proposed, wherein an Fe coating that can achieve a good electrodeposition coating performance is further applied on a pure Zn or Zn alloy coating. Conventionally known steel sheets of this type may include those wherein an upper layer comprises an Fe-Zn alloy coating having Fe content of 60 to 90 wt.%, and those wherein an upper layer comprises an Fe coating, and it is true that the application of the cationic electrodeposition coating on these double-layer plated steel sheets may result in generation of a decreased number of craterings on a coating film and can improve the coating appearance.
  • However, in order to lessen the generation of craterings on a coating film by providing the Fe-Zn alloy coating having Fe content of 60 to 90 wt.%, the coating weight must be made not less than 5 g/m2 (per one side), necessarily resulting in higher production cost. Moreover, this Fe alloy coating is so hard and brittle that an infinite number of crack may be formed when a plated steel sheet is worked into a component, with the result that the lower layer is exposed at the cracked portion. Therefore, when the electrodeposition coating is carried out, it follows that the electrodeposition coating is directly applied on the lower layer, and also that craterings are liable to be generated on the coating film.
  • On the other hand, in the case of the Fe coating, which is softer than the Fe-Zn alloy coating, no crack is generated even when the plated steel sheet is worked into a component, and only a little cratering is generated on the coating film. However, if the coating weight is less than 3 g/m2 (per one side), there is seen variation in the quantity of the generation of craterings. Although the variation factor has not been made clear, this is presumably because the covering rate in the upper layer coating relative to the lower layer coating is so poor, or the purity of the upper layer coating is so high, that large crystals of phosphate may tend to be formed during phosphating which is a pre-treatment for the electrodeposition coating, and, as a result, the rate of covering by the phosphate crystals on the surface of a coating may be lowered and also the variation in the covering rate may be caused to bring about a difference in the electrolytic conduction for electrodeposition coating, between the phosphate-deposited portion and non-deposited portion. Therefore, in order to lessen the generation of craterings on a coating film by providing the Fe coating, the coating weight must be 3 g/m2 (per one side), also necessarily resulting in higher production cost.
  • Taking account of the fact that the electrodeposition coating performance has not been perfect even in the double-layer plated steel sheet obtained by applying the Fe coating on the pure Zn coating or Zn alloy coating as mentioned above, this invention aims at providing a plated steel sheet that has been improved the electrodeposition coating performance and yet can achieve lower production cost.
  • Disclosure of the invention
  • This invention provides a plated steel sheet which is comprised of a plated steel sheet comprising a lower layer coating of pure Zn or a Zn alloy, provided on a steel sheet, and an upper layer coating of boron(B)-containing Fe or an Fe-Zn alloy having a boron-containing Fe percentage of 50 wt.% or more, provided on said lower layer coating, thereby making it possible to prevent craterings being generated on a coating film and lessen the upper layer coating weight.
  • The reason why the plated steel sheet of this invention can have an excellent electrodeposition coating performance is presumed to be that the presence of boron added to a bath at the time of the plating for the upper layer can improve the uniformity of the electrodeposition to give a uniform coating, and also that the boron contained in the upper layer can serve as a nucleus at the time of the deposition of phosphate when a phosphating is applied as a pre-treatment for the electrodeposition coating, to form a fine and dense phosphate coating, and, as a result, the electrolytic conduction on the entire surface of a steel sheet becomes uniform, whereby a coating material can be uniformly electrodeposited at the time the electrodeposition coating is carried out, and thus the generation of craterings can be stably restrained.
  • Best mode for working the invention
  • The plated steel sheet of this invention can restrain the generation of craterings in a coating film even when the coating weight is not more than 3 g/m2 per one side in the case the upper layer comprises the boron-containing Fe coating, or even when the coating weight is not more than 5 g/m2 per one side in the case the upper layer comprises the above element-containing Fe alloy coating. This is presumably because, even if the coating weight is small, the upper layer can cover the lower layer so excellently that the rate of covering of the lower layer by the upper layer can be improved.
  • In the case the upper layer comprises the Fe-Zn alloy coating, it has been conventionally impossible to lessen the generation of craterings in a coating film unless Fe content is controlled to 60 to less than 100 wt.%. However, the presence of boron contained makes it possible to lessen the generation of craterings in a coating film even if Fe content is decreased to 50 to less than 100 wt.%. This is presumably because of the above mentioned effect of improving the phosphating performance, and once the Fe content can be decreased like this, the difference in the corrosion potential between the upper layer and the lower layer becomes small, whereby the corrosion resistance of the coatings as a whole for a long period can be improved.
  • The amount of boron contained in the upper layer may preferably be controlled to 0.001 to 3 wt.%. This ia because the boron amount of less than 0.001 wt.% may result in no difference from an upper layer containing no boron in respect of the generation of craterings and variation thereof in the electrodeposition coating, and the boron amount more than 3 wt.% may result in saturation of the effect so that it is meaningless to make the amount larger than that.
  • The covering weight on the upper layer (per one side) may be preferably controlled to 0.5 to 10 g/m2 in the case of the boron-containing Fe coating, and 0.2 to 8 g/m2 in the case of the Fe alloy coating. This is because the weight of less than 0.5 g/m or 0.2 g/m2 may make it impossible to achieve perfect covering of the lower layer to bring about the generation of craterings in a coating film to be caused by the exposure of the lower layer at the time of the electrodeposition coating, and the weight more than 10 g/m2 or 8 g/m2 may result in saturation of the effect of restraining the generation of craterings in a coating film so that it is unnecessary to make the coating weight larger than that. Meanwhile, in the case of the conventional upper layer coating comprising the Fe-Zn alloy containing no boron, the effect of restraining the generation of craterings in a coating film has been saturated when the weight is 10 g 10/m g. The effect by virtue of the addition of boron can be seen also in this point, in respect of the decrease in the coating weight.
  • In order to codeposite boron into the upper layer in an amount of 0.001 to 3 wt.% according to electroplating, the plating may be carried out by adding one or more of boron compound(s) such as boric acid, metaboric acid, water soluble metaborate, water soluble tetraborate and tetrafluoroborate to an ordinary Fe plating bath or a plating bath of an Fe alloy such as an Fe-Zn alloy and an Fe-Ni alloy, and adjusting the pH of the bath to 1 to 3.
  • The steel sheet according to this invention can improve the performance in the electrodeposition coating of a pure Zn-plated or Zn alloy-plated steel sheet. However, in the case the lower layer comprises an Zn alloy coating of a Zn-Ni or Zn-Fe alloy, the generation of craterings can be restrained even with inclusion of a trace amount of one or more of elements such as Ni (in respect of the Zn-Fe alloy), Fe (in respect of the Zn-Ni alloy), Co, Cr, Mn, Mo and Ti. In the case the lower layer comprises a pure Zn coating, it can be also restrained even with respect to coatings obtained by carrying out electroplating, vacuum deposition or hot dipping. Further, in the case the upper layer comprises the Zn alloy coating, it can be also restrained even with respect, in addition to the coatings formed by the above methods, to those which are alloyed into a Zn-Fe alloy by thermal diffusion after carrying out hot dip zinc coating or vacuum zinc deposition as in the case of an alloyed zinc-plated steel sheet.
  • This invention will be described below more specifically by Examples.
  • Example 1
  • On a cold rolled steel sheet of 0.8 mm thick, usual treatments of degreasing and acid pickling were applied to make its surface clean. Thereafter, a lower layer coating comprising pure Zn, an Zn-Fe alloy or Zn-Ni alloy was first provided according to electroplating under the conditions as shown in Table 1, and next an upper layer coating comprising Fe or Fe-B was provided on it according to the same plating method.
  • Subsequently, from the thus plated steel sheet, samples were collected by 10 sheets per each plating condition, which were treated with a commercially available phosphating solution (Bt 3030; produced by Nippon Parker Co.), followed by carrying out cationic electrodeposition coating to examine the number of oraterings generated on the coatings after drying by baking. In the electrodeposition, Elecron #9000 (produced by Kansai Paint Co., Ltd.) was used as a coating material, which was electrodeposited according to an instantaneous voltage-increasing method (the so-called "dokan" method) under 300 V to have a coating film thickness of 25 um, and the baking was carried out at 180°C for 20 minutes. The number of craterings generated in the coating film when provided with an Fe-B coating as the upper layer is shown in Table 2.
  • As will be clear from Table 2, the steel sheets of this invention, provided with an Fe-B coating as the upper layer, show less generation of craterings and variation thereof than those in conventional double-layer plated steel sheets provided with an upper layer Zn coating and having a good electrodeposition coating performance, even with a lower layer comprising a pure Zn coating or a Zn alloy coating.
    Figure imgb0001
    Figure imgb0002
    Figure imgb0003
  • Example 2
  • A cold rolled steel sheet of 0.8 mm thick was treated in the same manner as in Example 1 to make its surface clean. Thereafter, a lower layer coating comprising a Zn-Fe alloy or a Zn-Ni alloy was first provided under the conditions as shown in Table 3, and next an upper layer coating comprising a boron containing Fe-Zn alloy or a boron-free Fe-Zn alloy was provided on it.
  • Subsequently, samples were collected from this plated steel sheet, and subjected to phosphating and electrodeposition coating in the same manner as in Example 1 to produce coated steel sheets having a coating film thickness of 23 um. The number of craterings generated in the coating film when provided with a boron-containing high Fe-Zn alloy coating as the upper layer is shown in Table 4.
    Figure imgb0004
    Figure imgb0005
    Figure imgb0006
  • Example 3
  • A steel strip of 0.6 mm thick and 300 mm wide was reduced in a pre-treatment oven of a gas reduction system, and thereafter passed through a pressurizing chamber for preventing inflow of gas or air and a seal roll chamber in which pressure is stepwise reduced by means of a number of seal rolls, and then introduced into a first vacuum deposition chamber equipped with a vacuum deposition Zn bath of an electrical resistance heating system at a lower side of the position of the steel strip, to apply a deposition coating of pure Zn on one side of the steel strip. Subsequently, the steel strip was guided to a second vacuum deposition chamber disposed at a lower side of the above first vacuum deposition chamber and having the same construction as the first vacuum deposition chamber to apply a deposition coating of pure Zn on the opposite side of the steel strip, and thereafter passed through a seal roll chamber and a pressurizing chamber to produce a deposited steel strip having a coating weight of 50 g/m2 (per one side). The plating was carried out under the conditions of a steel strip moving speed of 15 m/min and a vacuum degree of 0.01 Torr in both the first and second vacuum deposition chambers.
  • Next, part of the pure Zn-plated steel strip thus produced was introduced in an oven having an atmosphere of a mixed gas (dew point: -25°C) comprising 3 % of H2 and 97 % of N2' and heated to 2800C to form the coating into a Zn-Fe alloy, thereby producing a steel strip provided with a coating of a Zn-Fe alloy having an Fe percentage of 10 wt.%.
  • Thereafter, this Zn-Fe alloy-plated steel strip and the pure Zn-plated steel strip were subjected to electroplating to respectively provide a Fe coating or a Fe-B coating under the same conditions as those for the upper layer coating shown in Table 1, and a boron-containing high Fe-Zn coating under the same conditions as those for the upper layer coating shown in Table 3, followed by carrying out electrodeposition coating under the same conditions as in Example 1. The states of generation of craterings in the coating film are shown in Table 5 and Table 6.
    Figure imgb0007
    Figure imgb0008
  • Possibility of industrial utilization
  • The plated steel sheet according to this invention can achieve a good coating appearance when used not only in automobile body components but also in other components such as electrical equipment components for domestic use and construction components on which the electrodeposition coating is carried out. Since also having an excellent coating performance for coating materials other than the coating materials for the electrodeposition, the present steel sheet can be also applied in such a use for general coating.

Claims (5)

  1. Scope of claim 1. A plated steel sheet having an excellent coating performance, comprising a lower layer coating of pure Zn or a Zn alloy, provided on a steel sheet, and an upper layer coating of boron-containing Fe or an Fe-Zn alloy having a boron-containing Fe percentage of 50 wt.% or more, provided on said lower layer coating.
  2. 2. The plated steel sheet having an excellent coating performance according to Claim 1, wherein said upper layer comprises a coating of Fe containing 0.001 to 3 wt.% of boron.
  3. 3. The plated steel sheet having an excellent coating performance according to Claim 1, wherein said upper layer comprises a coating of an Fe-Zn alloy containing 0.001 to 3 wt.% of boron.
  4. 4. The plated steel sheet having an excellent coating performance according to Claim 1 or 2, wherein the coating weight of the upper layer is 0.5 to 10 g/m per one side in the case said upper layer comprises the boron-containing Fe coating.
  5. 5. The plated steel sheet having an excellent coating performance according to Claim 1 or 3, wherein the coating weight of the upper layer is 0.2 to 8 g/m2 per one side in the case said upper layer comprises the Fe-Zn alloy having a boron-containing Fe percentage of 50 wt.% or more.
EP87902156A 1986-03-29 1987-03-27 Plated steel excellent in coatability Expired - Lifetime EP0264455B1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
JP61071884A JPS62228498A (en) 1986-03-29 1986-03-29 Plated steel sheet for painting
JP71884/86 1986-03-29
CA000539351A CA1309055C (en) 1986-03-29 1987-06-10 Plated steel sheet having excellent coating performance

Publications (3)

Publication Number Publication Date
EP0264455A1 true EP0264455A1 (en) 1988-04-27
EP0264455A4 EP0264455A4 (en) 1991-03-13
EP0264455B1 EP0264455B1 (en) 1993-06-02

Family

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Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
EP87902156A Expired - Lifetime EP0264455B1 (en) 1986-03-29 1987-03-27 Plated steel excellent in coatability

Country Status (7)

Country Link
EP (1) EP0264455B1 (en)
JP (1) JPS62228498A (en)
KR (1) KR920009844B1 (en)
AU (1) AU589767B2 (en)
CA (1) CA1309055C (en)
DE (1) DE3786056T2 (en)
WO (1) WO1987005950A1 (en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE3943243A1 (en) * 1988-12-30 1990-07-05 Po Hang Iron & Steel STEEL SHEET WITH A COATING FROM AN IRON-MANGANE ALLOY AND METHOD FOR THE PRODUCTION THEREOF
GB2227252A (en) * 1987-07-23 1990-07-25 Nisshin Steel Co Ltd Electroplating steel sheets with fe-b alloy prior to hot-dip metal coating
EP0627496A2 (en) * 1993-06-02 1994-12-07 Andritz-Patentverwaltungs-Gesellschaft m.b.H. Method and device for coating metal substrates, especially steel- and aluminium-sheets in shape of tapes

Families Citing this family (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPH0610358B2 (en) * 1986-12-06 1994-02-09 日新製鋼株式会社 Multi-layer electric plated steel sheet
EP0285931B1 (en) * 1987-03-31 1993-08-04 Nippon Steel Corporation Corrosion resistant plated steel strip and method for producing same

Family Cites Families (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPS56142885A (en) * 1980-04-08 1981-11-07 Nippon Steel Corp Steel material with plural plating layers
JPS59116393A (en) * 1982-12-23 1984-07-05 Kobe Steel Ltd Surface-treated steel sheet with superior corrosion resistance after coating

Non-Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
See references of WO8705950A1 *

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2227252A (en) * 1987-07-23 1990-07-25 Nisshin Steel Co Ltd Electroplating steel sheets with fe-b alloy prior to hot-dip metal coating
FR2642089A1 (en) * 1987-07-23 1990-07-27 Nisshin Steel Co Ltd METHOD FOR IMMERSION COATING IN A MOLTEN METAL BATH OF WETABLE MEDIOCREMENT STEEL SHEET
GB2227252B (en) * 1987-07-23 1992-09-30 Nisshin Steel Co Ltd Process for hot-dip metal coating steel sheets
DE3943243A1 (en) * 1988-12-30 1990-07-05 Po Hang Iron & Steel STEEL SHEET WITH A COATING FROM AN IRON-MANGANE ALLOY AND METHOD FOR THE PRODUCTION THEREOF
EP0627496A2 (en) * 1993-06-02 1994-12-07 Andritz-Patentverwaltungs-Gesellschaft m.b.H. Method and device for coating metal substrates, especially steel- and aluminium-sheets in shape of tapes
EP0627496A3 (en) * 1993-06-02 1995-06-14 Andritz Patentverwaltung Method and device for coating metal substrates, especially steel- and aluminium-sheets in shape of tapes.
AT400040B (en) * 1993-06-02 1995-09-25 Andritz Patentverwaltung METHOD AND DEVICE FOR COATING METAL SUBSTRATES, IN PARTICULAR STEEL OR ALUMINUM SHEETS IN STRIP SHAPE
US5616362A (en) * 1993-06-02 1997-04-01 Andritz-Patentverwaltungs-Gesellschaft M.B.H. Process and apparatus for the coating of metal

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
AU7208087A (en) 1987-10-20
DE3786056T2 (en) 1993-10-28
JPH0156159B2 (en) 1989-11-29
WO1987005950A1 (en) 1987-10-08
CA1309055C (en) 1992-10-20
DE3786056D1 (en) 1993-07-08
EP0264455A4 (en) 1991-03-13
EP0264455B1 (en) 1993-06-02
JPS62228498A (en) 1987-10-07
AU589767B2 (en) 1989-10-19
KR920009844B1 (en) 1992-10-31
KR880700868A (en) 1988-04-13

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