Electroplating: Submitted by
Electroplating: Submitted by
Electroplating: Submitted by
[1]
SUBMITTED BY:
1.DTU/2K12/A01/0051
2.DTU/2K12/A01/0052
3.DTU/2K12/A01/0053
4.DTU/2K12/A01/0054
5.DTU/2K12/A01/0056
6.DTU/2K12/A01/0057
7.DTU/2K12/A01/0058
8.DTU/2K12/A01/0059
9.DTU/2K12/A01/0060
PANKAJ ARYA
PRANAV KUMAR pranav.7@aol.com
PRANAV SARAFF
PRANJUL KANSAL pranjulkansal@gmail.com
PREETAM CHAND prtmchnd27@gmail.com
RAJESH KUMAR rkrajesh304@gmail.com
REESHABH RAJ rajreeshabh@gmail.com
ROHIT JAIN bestrohit05@gmail.com
SAHAJ RATHI rathisahaj5@gmail.com
INTRODUCTION
Electroplating is a plating process in which metal ions in a solution are moved by an electric
field to coat an electrode. The process uses electrical current to reduce cations of a desired
material from a solution and coat a conductive object with a thin layer of the material, such as a
metal. Electroplating is primarily used for depositing a layer of material to bestow a desired
property (e.g., abrasion and wear resistance, corrosion protection, lubricity, aesthetic qualities,
etc.) to a surface that otherwise lacks that property. Another application uses electroplating to
build up thickness on undersized parts.
The process used in electroplating is called electrodeposition. It is analogous to a galvanic cell
acting in reverse. The part to be plated is the cathode of the circuit. In one technique, the anode
is made of the metal to be plated on the part. Both components are immersed in a solution called
an electrolyte containing one or more dissolved metal salts as well as other ions that permit the
flow of electricity. A power supply supplies a direct current to the anode, oxidizing the metal
atoms that comprise it and allowing them to dissolve in the solution. At the cathode, the
dissolved metal ions in the electrolyte solution are reduced at the interface between the solution
and the cathode, such that they "plate out" onto the cathode. The rate at which the anode is
dissolved is equal to the rate at which the cathode is plated, vis-a-vis the current flowing
through the circuit. In this manner, the ions in the electrolyte bath are continuously replenished
by the anode.
Other electroplating processes may use a non-consumable anode such as lead. In these
techniques, ions of the metal to be plated must be periodically replenished in the bath as they
are drawn out of the solution.[2]
electrical conductivity is the most important criterion, and silver is the preferred coating.
Good bearing properties may require coatings of tin, lead or indium. If a hard surface is
required, chromium or nickel usually will serve. These few examples illustrate another use
of metal finishing; to modify the surface properties, either physical or chemical, to render
them suitable for the intended use.
Although the answer may be obvious, we may pause momentarily to consider this question: if
these coating metals are necessary to provide the article with the desired properties, why go
through the somewhat complicating process of electroplating? Why not simply manufacture
the article out of the desired metal in the first place? Usually the answer is cost or
availability, and, in some cases, the properties of the metals concerned. An all-platinum
chemical reaction vessel of practical production size would be prohibitively expensive; but a
steel vessel, clad with a relatively thin layer of platinum, serves the purpose at far lower cost.
An all-nickel automobile bumper would render the car a luxury for the rich, aside from the
fact that the required amount of nickel would probably be unobtainable. A tin can made
entirely of tin would not only be more expensive than the good inside, but would also have
no physical strength; tin is a very soft and weak metal. Chromium in massive form is almost
impossible to work into useful shapes. In summary electroplating allows the use of relatively
inexpensive metals like steel and zinc for the bulk of the article, while affording to the
exterior the selected properties of the coating chosen.
which are similarly hung on the cathode bar by hooks. The racks themselves are so
constructed as to hold one or many parts, depending on their size and shape, and are often
custom-made for the particular work being processed. The racks usually are covered with
insulating material except where they make contact with the work and the cathode bus bar.
When the work consists of many small parts (screws, nuts, small electric connectors, and the
like) which do not lend themselves to being hung individually on plating racks, they may be
placed in bulk in a barrel, which takes the place of the cathode and is rotated in the plating
bath so that all parts at some time come into contact with a cathode placed inside the barrel.
The barrel has holes, too small to permit the parts to fall out but large enough to permit fairly
good circulation of the solution and passage of the electrolytic current. Barrels are of many
types; some are self-contained (oblique barrels) and hold the solution, the anode, and the
cathode contact, thus dispensing with plating tank altogether. Barrels meant to be inserted into
a plating tank may be of many shapes and of many materials, and the cathode contacts may be
so-called danglers, buttons or of other forms. Barrel plating is no different in principle from
plating on racks, though it has its own problems of design and plate distribution.
4
5.
Alloys - an almost unlimited number of alloys has been plated experimentally, since
the possible combinations of the plateable metals, in various proportions, are
innumerable. Only a few have attained commercial importance.
ELECTRICAL RELATIONSHIPS
Faraday's laws of electrolysis
Michael Faraday, perhaps the greatest experimental scientist in history, enunciated his laws
of electrolysis in 1833, and these laws have remained unchallenged ever since. They are basic
to both the understanding and the practical use of electrolytic processes. They may be stated
as follows:
1.
The amount of chemical change produced by an electrical current is proportional to
the quantity of electricity that passes.
2.
The amounts of different substances liberated by a given quantity of electricity are
inversely proportional to their chemical equivalent weights.
Equivalent weight is an older term, but still used widely in analytical and electrochemistry. In
redox chemistry it is the molar mass divided by the number of electrons in the balanced redox
half-equation.
Mathematically Faraday's laws of electrolysis can be expressed as:
Q zm/M
Q = It = zFn
where Q is the charged passed, I is the current passed, t is the time the current is passed, z is
the change in oxidation state, m and M are the mass and molar mass respectively of oxidised
-1
or reduced species, F is the Faraday constant (96 485 C mol , the charge of one mole of
electrons), and n is the amount of substance oxidised or reduced.
These laws correctly predict that:
1
by measuring the quantity of electricity passed, one has a measure of the amount of
chemical change that will thereby be produced;
2
knowing the chemical equivalent weight of a substance, one can predict the amount of
that substance that will be liberated by a given quantity of electricity.
No true exceptions to these laws have ever been confirmed. Apparent exceptions can always
be explained by the failure to take into account all the chemical reactions involved, or,
occasionally, by the partially non-electrolytic nature of the reaction.
Current Efficiency
It has been stated that the total amount of chemical change at an electrode is exactly
proportional to the quantity of electricity passing. Often, however, we are interested in only
one of the several chemical changes taking place, and any current used up in causing other
changes is considered "wasted". In the usual electroplating situation, our interest focuses on
the quantity of metal deposited at the cathode or dissolved at the anode, and any hydrogen
evolved at the cathode by the reaction
2H2O + 2e H2 + 2OH
or oxygen at the anode by the reaction
+
2H2O O2 + 4H (aq) + 4e
represents a waste of electricity and a reduction in the efficiency of the process. Thus we
speak of percentage current efficiency as the ratio of the desired chemical change to the total
chemical change multiplied by 100:
Current efficiency (CE) = 100 x Act/Theo
where CE is current efficiency in percent, Act is the weight actually deposited and Theo is
the weight to be expected from Faraday's laws if there were no side reactions.
Cathode efficiency is current efficiency as applied to the cathode reaction, and anode
efficiency is current efficiency as applied to the anode reaction.
Current Distribution
The current divided by the apparent area yields an average figure. Except for the simplest
geometries of a cell, such as when the anode and cathode are concentric, the current is not
uniform over the surface of an electrode. In fact, the manner in which the current distributes
itself over an electrode surface in any practical case is quite complicated, usually far too
much so to be simply calculated from geometry. Current will tend to concentrate at edges
and points, and unless the resistance of the solution is extremely low (lower than in any
practical case), it will flow more readily to parts near the opposite electrode than to more
distant parts. Thus, except for the simplest parts subject to electroplating, the thickness of
deposit, which depends on the current density, will not be uniform over the surface.
TESTING CORROSION
In order to determine whether a metal, a combination of metals, or a coating system is
suitable for use in a given environment, it is necessary to test it in that environment. It is well
to repeat here that corrosion is not an action but an interaction, which involves both the metal
and its environment. It is pointless to test a panel in dilute sulfuric acid if the contemplated
use involves exposure to seawater.
As nearly as possible, corrosion testing should be carried out in an environment that simulates
that in which the part will be used. For most finished metal articles, this requirement is not at
all easy to meet. Because corrosion is usually a fairly gradual process, the user or
manufacturer cannot afford to wait for the results of a test carried out in strictly natural
environments; by the time results are available, the purpose of the test - to predict the
performance of the item - would be negated. Therefore many accelerated tests have been
devised, with the aim of speeding up the process of corrosion while at the same time
simulating its effects. But because the nature of the environment is so important to corrosion
processes, it is difficult to speed up the process without changing it, and the best that can be
hoped is that accelerated tests will be fairly accurate in predicting the actual service
performance of an electroplated or otherwise finished metal article.
Natural environments are of many kinds and contain many types of corrosive chemicals. If a
metal part is to be finished for a specific service, then it should be tested for corrosion
resistance in as near a replication of that service environment as possible. Perhaps corrosion
may be accelerated by heat; for example, tinplate is often tested in contact with the foods it
will contain, but instead of the "room" temperature at which most canned foods are stored,
higher temperatures are used in the test room so that any failures will be noted more quickly.
Even such acceleration is not entirely free of doubt, since it is possible that the corrosion
mechanism can change with temperature, and not all corrosion reactions are accelerated by
heat.
Many electroplated items, however, are destined for service in various environments whose
nature is not known at the time of manufacture. The best example of this type of service is
provided by the bright work on automobiles; bumper bars, grilles, hubcaps, door handles, and
other decorative trim. The product may be used in any one or a combination of several types
of atmospheres, which differ greatly in their aggressiveness toward electroplated coatings and
substrates.
Many industrial organizations and testing societies maintain outdoor exposure stations where
metals and other materials can be exposed to the elements continuously and note can be
taken of their behaviour by inspecting them at suitable time intervals. This sort of testing is
slightly accelerated, and for most purposes except long-range research not sufficiently so to
obtain speedy results.
A closer approach to actual service conditions is obtained when specimens are mounted on
"mobile" exposure. Thus panels may be placed on trucks driven normally on highways
during a northern winter, subjected to deicing salts as well as the usual dirt and debris
characteristic of such use, or mounted on tugboats plying say, New York Harbour. Such
testing offers the advantage of severe exposure under real-life conditions; it suffers from the
drawback that specimens may be mechanically damaged, lost or impossible to trace.
Truly accelerated laboratory tests - whose aim is to provide answers to the question "how
well does the finishing system resist corrosion? - have been developed and are in general use.
However, how well such accelerated tests predict actual behaviour under service conditions
is an unanswered question. Such tests include the following:
Neutral Salt Spray (Fog) Test. Widely used and specified, the test consists essentially of
spraying the specimens with a mist of 5% or 20% sodium chloride solution in a closed
cabinet, under strictly specified conditions of temperature and spray rate. Many
standardising bodies, including ASTM, offer detailed directions for running the test: ASTM
B 117.
Acetic Acid Salt Spray (Fog) Test. Similar to the above, with the mist solution acidified with
acetic acid for faster action. ASTM B 287.
Copper-accelerated Acetic Acid Salt Spray (CASS) Test. Similar, but with the addition of
copper salts to the mist solution; ASTM B 368.
Corrodkote Test. The specimen is coated with a slurry of kaolin containing copper nitrate,
ferric chloride, and ammonium chloride. The slurry is allowed to dry and the coated
specimen is placed in a humidity chamber; it is removed, cleaned, and examined after
stated intervals of time; ASTM B 380.
Electrochemical Corrosion Test (ECT). The specimen is made anodic in a specified
electrolyte; under carefully controlled conditions corrosion is stated to occur within a
few minutes.
Sulphur Dioxide Test. The specimen is suspended in a closed chamber in the presence
of sulphur dioxide gas.
Humidity tests of various kinds. None of these tests has been shown to accurately predict
service behaviour under all conditions. The neutral salt spray, though still specified, has lost
favour for research purposes, for it often gives the wrong answer in comparing the relative
merits of different coatings.
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPLICATIONS
In most parts of the world the authorities set acceptance standards for the discharge of
industrial effluent into sewers and water courses. It is usually necessary to obtain the
approval of the appropriate authority in the form of a 'consent to discharge' before a discharge
can be made or alterations are made in the concentration or volume of an existing discharge.
There are very few metal finishing plants from which the rinse waters can be discharged
directly to the sewers as the contaminant concentrations are outside the limits set by local
authorities. With the majority of instillations, therefore, effluent treatment is necessary.
There are a number of methods which may be employed to reduce the level of contaminant in
the effluent discharge and thus simplify subsequent effluent treatment. In the main these
methods rely on good housekeeping with a liberal dose of common sense added for good
measure.
In effluent treatment the usual practice is to separate the acidic discharges, together with
those containing nickel or chromium from alkaline and cyanide discharges which may
contain metals such as zinc, cadmium or copper. Cyanide baths must be kept alkaline as
pKa(HCN) is 9.21 and at that pH half of the cyanide would be present as volatile HCN.
-
These are then separated out in the form of a sludge. Depending on the consent conditions
the clarified effluent may then be discharged to waste or it may be necessary to re-adjust the
pH to an acceptable value. It may also be necessary to filter the effluent before discharge.
[3]
Electroplating Example
A simple example of the electroplating process is the electroplating of copper in which the
metal to be plated (copper) is used as the anode and the electrolyte solution contains the ion of
the metal to be plated (Cu2+ in this example). Copper goes into solution at the anode as it is
plated at the cathode. A constant concentration of Cu2+ is maintained in the electrolyte solution
surrounding the electrodes:
Electrolyte
Application
Cu
Cu
electrotype
Ag
Ag
jewelry, tableware
Au
Au, C, NiCr
jewelry
Cr
Pb
automobile parts
Ni
Ni
Cr base plate
Zn
Zn
galvanized steel
Sn
Sn
tin-plated cans
HULL CELL
[4]
The Hull cell is a type of test cell used to qualitatively check the condition of an
electroplating bath. It allows for optimization for current density range, optimization of
additive concentration, recognition of impurity effects and indication of macro-throwing
power capability.[5] The Hull cell replicates the plating bath on a lab scale. It is filled with a
sample of the plating solution, an appropriate anode which is connected to a rectifier. The
"work" is replaced with a hull cell test panel that will be plated to show the "health" of the
bath.
The Hull cell is a trapezoidal container that holds 267 ml of solution. This shape allows one
to place the test panel on an angle to the anode. As a result, the deposit is plated at different
current densities which can be measured with a hull cell ruler. The solution volume allows
for a quantitative optimization of additive concentration: 1 gram addition to 267 mL is
equivalent to 0.5 oz/gal in the plating tank.[6]
REFERENCES
1.http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/3/39
/Electroplating_Cell.png
2.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electroplating
3.http://nzic.org.nz/ChemProcesses/metals/8G.p
df
4.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Hullcell.jpg
5.Metal Finishing: Guidebook and Directory.
Issue 98. 95. 1998. p. 588.
6.Hull Cell 101