|
|
|
| Recent Advances and Future Prospects of Novel Self-Healing Coating Technologies in Aerospace Applications |
| XUE Mingshan, GUO Jingxiao, HONG Zhen, YIN Zuozhu, LUO Yidan, XIE Chan |
| School of Materials Science and Engineering, Nanchang Hangkong University, Nanchang 330063, China |
|
|
|
|
Abstract Aerospace equipment such as aircraft, satellites, and space stations are exposed to multi-field coupling environments including extreme temperature fluctuations, atomic oxygen erosion, ultraviolet radiation, and the penetration of local corrosive media (such as Cl–), which can cause mechanical damage and chemical failure of surface protective coatings. Traditional repair methods, due to insufficient precision and poor adaptability to working conditions, are difficult to meet the protection requirements of complex equipment. Self-healing coatings, designed based on biomimetic repair mechanisms, trigger targeted repair responses in damaged areas, providing an innovative solution for extending the lifespan of equipment. This paper systematically introduces the technical characteristics of exogenous and intrinsic self-healing coatings, and focuses on discussing the engineering application breakthroughs of self-healing coatings in typical aerospace environments (such as thermal shock-resistant coatings for engine hot-end components and atomic oxygen-resistant coatings for space station modules) and special working conditions (such as aircraft body protection in high-humidity and high-salt environments at coastal airports). It reveals the cross-scale action mechanism of “damage perception-repair triggering-performance regeneration”, and points out that environment-adaptive repair, in-situ monitoring integration, and multi-mechanism synergy will be the core directions for future development in this field.
|
|
|
|
|
| PACS: V257.2 |
|
|
|
|
|
|