Abstract:
An environmental protective coating (EPC) for protecting a surface subjected to high temperature environments of more than 3000 degree F. The coating includes a dense platelet lamellar microstructure with a self-sealing, compliant binder material for holding the platelets together. The platelets may be formed from materials that are resistant to high temperatures and impermeable, such as ceramics. The lamellar microstructure creates a tortuous path for oxygen to reach the surface. The binder material may have free internal volume to increase the strain capability between the platelets and absorb increased volume during operation. The binder may be formed from a material that is softer and has a lower temperature capability than the platelets to provide the system with the required compliance and sealing capability. The binder may have sufficient glass content and glass-forming content for initial and long-term sealing purposes.

Description:
TECHNICAL FIELD OF THE INVENTION 
       [0001]    The present invention relates generally to surface coatings and more particularly, an improved environmental barrier coating to protect a surface subjected to ultra high temperatures and oxidation. 
       BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
       [0002]    It is often necessary to protect high temperature articles with an Environmental Protection Coating (EPC). EPC&#39;s have insulative and chemical protection capabilities to protect surfaces from the harsh environment. 
         [0003]    EPC&#39;s are typically applied to hot sections of gas turbines or jet engines, such as combustor cans, nozzle guide vanes, and turbine blades. One of the functions of these coatings is to increase engine efficiency by elevating the operational temperature or reducing the need for cooling air. The use of thermal barrier coatings in large turbines for land-based power generation is critically necessary for an acceptable operating lifetime. EPC&#39;s and cooling mechanisms are often used in turbine systems to protect the metallic parts that comprise turbines. The EPC enables extension of component life and improved reliability by lowering the operating metal temperature, thereby also lowering loss of strength and oxidation. As such, costs are reduced by eliminating elaborate cooling schemes required for metals in high temperature applications. The increased maximum gas temperature permitted by the EPC insulating and chemical protective capabilities provides significant performance improvement and thus large cost savings by increasing the turbine inlet temperatures. Efficiency improvements are thus limited by the capabilities of the EPC applied to turbine parts, such as the blades. Higher temperature EPC&#39;s may also enable similar efficiency improvements in small radius hypersonic aircraft leading edges, higher thermal efficiency engine components and exhaust washed surfaces. 
         [0004]    The life and performance of high speed aircraft may also be improved by the application of EPC&#39;s. As with the turbine blades, the EPC&#39;s provide protection from heat and oxidation within the limits of the EPC&#39;s. The application of EPC&#39;s on forward facing surfaces is especially important for hypersonic aircraft due to the pronounced aero-thermal heating that occurs at those speeds. The operational speed of the wing and thus the aircraft is thus also limited by the capabilities of the EPC applied to the leading edges. 
         [0005]    The current EPC&#39;s used at temperatures approaching 3000 degrees F. are typically silica-sealed ceramics. Hypersonic edge coatings are typically silica while turbine blades are typically Zirconia based. The ceramic coating may employ refractory oxides, nitrides, borides or carbides, to provide the thermal barrier. Refractory materials may include compounds of Al, Si, Zr, Hf, and Ta, among others. Silicon-based coatings, which oxidize to silica glasses, have capabilities of between 2400 to 3000 degrees F., depending on the lifetime required, can remain effective for up to thousands of hours or for short term single use, respectively. At ultra high temperatures, i.e. above 3000 degrees F., the current EPC&#39;s degrade rapidly. 
         [0006]    Attempts to develop higher temperature EPC&#39;s, however, have been met with various material deficiencies as shown below: 
         [0007]    1. Sealant qualities: In order to ensure initial and in-use requirements to impede the ingress of oxygen to the substrate, the coating must be able to form appropriate sealing glasses (oxides) to seal off any cracks, pin-holes or porosity that may develop from chemical activities or physical stresses. Current high temperature EPC&#39;s do not provide adequate sealing from oxygen at ambient, intermediate and ultra high temperatures. 
         [0008]    2. Compliance: High thermal strains are typically experienced in weak and high modulus EPC ceramics. This strain creates stresses greater than constituent failure strength for high CTE or temperature differential, causing spalling and cracking 
         [0009]    3. Volatility: Preferred sealing materials have high vapor pressures at the temperatures of interest; some, like silica, enter a regime of active oxidation and rapidly degrade. Very high internal vapor pressure can push aside viscous sealants creating pin-holes. 
         [0010]    4. Mis-matched Coefficient of Thermal Expansion (CTE): Protective coatings expand at a different rate than the substrate when heated and generate very high stresses leading to cracks, pin-holes and spalling. 
         [0011]    5. Chemical incompatibility: EPC constituents capable of producing environmentally stable compounds may be reactive with the substrates. 
         [0012]    6. Adhesion: Existing EPCs may not adhere well to the substrate. 
         [0013]    Attractive compounds exist that may be useful in developing improved EPC&#39;s. Inter-metallic MAX phase compounds are ternary carbides and nitrides with the general formula M n+1 AX n  (MAX) with n=1-3. M is an early transition metal, A is an A-group element (predominantly IIIA and IVA in the periodic table) and X can be carbon and/or nitrogen. These compounds behave like metals regarding their machinability and their thermal and electrical conductivities but behave like ceramics in terms of stiffness, oxidation resistance, thermal stabilities and high melting points. However, even these attractive materials do not have the breath of properties required for ultra high temperature environments as they are poly-crystalline, develop high thermal stresses, tend towards cracking and oxidation at grain boundaries, providing pathways for oxygen to reach the substrate surface. Use of such materials would require an integrated material engineering solution combining material characteristics in advantageous micro-structures by further processing. 
         [0014]    There is thus a continuing and pressing need for improved EPCs so as to advance the efficiency and life of articles subjected to ultra high temperatures. 
       SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
       [0015]    In one embodiment of the present invention, an improved EPC is shown for protecting a surface subjected to high temperature environments. The coating can advantageously operate at ultra high temperatures, i.e. more than 3000 degree F. Current EPC&#39;s with silica based sealents are deficient at these temperatures because they rapidly degrade due to volatilization and active oxidation. Higher temperature refractory based coatings are brittle and have poor CTE matches to 3000+F substrates leading to sealant failures. 
         [0016]    The proposed protective coating may comprise a high temperature, dense platelet nacreous microstructure with a self-sealing, high temperature, compliant binder material for holding the platelets together. Nacreous refers to the similarity in the layering of platelets to that seen in nacre or shells. The platelets may be formed from a refractory oxide, mixed refractory oxides, refractory ceramics, refractory metals or alloys, or inter-metallic MAX phase compounds which generate refractory oxides with a minimum L/D (flat plate dimension/thickness) of five, preferably greater than ten to ensure a tortuous migration path for oxygen. 
         [0017]    The binder material may be capable of or have free internal volume in a non-rigid morphology to increase the strain capability between the platelets to accommodate differential thermal expansion. The high strain component may have weak crystalline bonding or complex, ligamentary internal structures oriented significantly normal to the platelets with domain size less than the inter-platelet distance. Large strain capabilities may extend in the plane of the platelets or all directions; strain isotropy is achieved by multi-dimensional strain components or random arrangement of anisotropic strain elements. 
         [0018]    The binder may be formulated with a material or oxide forming element(s) that have a softening point significantly lower than the platelets to provide the system with further compliance and sealing capability. Glass formers of sufficient quantity in the binder will soften at operating temperatures enabling flow and capillary wetting to seal coating breaches. Glass creep, or deformation, will allow stress relief between the platelets until the temperature drops below the softening point and reduces the total thermal stress in the coating as it cools. 
         [0019]    The EPC of the present invention may also be manufactured, for example, by preparing a skeleton or scaffold from carbon or other fugitive material covered with a refractory material. A binder or mortar can be prepared by converting the refractory material on the fugitive scaffold to an oxide for stable structure and improved sealing. With exposure to heat and/or oxygen, internal volume in the binder can be established by volatizing the fugitive component to allow for strain release. Further, the binder can be processed into a particulate size controlled, smooth paste capable of locating a plurality of platelets at a desired spacing from each other and arranging the platelets into a lamellar structure resembling a brick wall, when viewed in cross-section. 
         [0020]    The complete invention consists of an engineered nacreous microstructure providing enhanced arrangement of platelets and high strain binder. Platelets may be physically organized to provide the enhanced arrangement. Chemical modification of the platelets may also be utilized to aid in organization. Locating the edge of one platelet with the center of the adjacent platelets is preferred to maximize the tortuous path through the coating and the strength of the coating. Chemical treatment to create charges or attractive forces of the platelet edges to the center may be used with flat platelets or in addition to shaping to further decrease the tendency of platelets edges to line up through the thickness, creating weak spots in the coating. The platelets consist of low porosity, low permeability refractory material resistant to degradation by oxygen and nitrogen with sufficient length over thickness to produce a tortuous diffusion path; typically with an L/D greater than 5, preferably greater than 10. The strain isolation of the typically high modulus platelets is provided by the weakly bonded and/or very compliant nature of binder constituents held in place with highly viscous glasses which provide cohesion to the coating, further stress relief and persistent sealing of the tortuous diffusion path. The strain isolation capability of the nacreous coating is derived from controlled introduction of free volume. Size reduction, orientation via processing and material formulation of the binder constituents organized into fine, irregular cells with fugitive fractions and low inter-laminar strength create the free volume. Heating and oxidizing remove the fugitive components and break weak cleavage bonds of the particulates creating the initial free volume to absorb thermal expansion and allow oxide sealant formation. This combination of materials can be fabricated as a paste or film adhesive. 
     
    
     
       BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
         [0021]      FIG. 1  is a cross sectional, schematic view of an EPC applied to a surface that resists ultra high temperatures and inhibits oxidation of the surface, in accordance with embodiments of the present invention. 
           [0022]      FIG. 2  is a cross sectional, schematic view of the EPC of  FIG. 1  showing an example of oxygen migration during operation, in accordance with embodiments of the present invention. 
           [0023]      FIG. 3  is a cross sectional, schematic view of the oxide formation in the EPC of  FIG. 1 , in accordance with embodiments of the present invention. 
           [0024]      FIG. 3A  is an enlarged cross sectional, schematic view of a portion of the oxide formation shown in  FIG. 3 , in accordance with embodiments of the present invention. 
           [0025]      FIGS. 4-6A  are schematic views of a process for manufacturing an EPC, in accordance with embodiments of the present invention. 
           [0026]      FIG. 7  is a perspective, schematic view of platelet geometry, in accordance with embodiments of the present invention. 
           [0027]      FIG. 8  is a perspective, schematic view of platelet geometry, in accordance with embodiments of the present invention. 
           [0028]      FIG. 9  is a perspective view of an alternate geometry for a scaffold used in the manufacturing of an EPC as described in  FIGS. 4-6A . 
           [0029]      FIG. 10  is a perspective view of an alternate geometry for a scaffold used in the manufacturing of an EPC as described in  FIGS. 4-6A . 
       
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION 
       [0030]    The apparatus and method of the present disclosure will now be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings in which embodiments are shown. This subject of the present disclosure may, however, be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the illustrated embodiments set forth herein; rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the invention to those skilled in the art. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout. For the convenience in referring to the accompanying figures, directional terms are used for reference and illustration only. For example, the directional terms such as “upper”, “lower”, “above”, “below”, and the like are used to illustrate a relational location. 
         [0031]    It is to be understood that the subject of the present disclosure is not limited to the exact details of construction, operation, exact materials, or embodiments shown and described, as modifications and equivalents will be apparent to one skilled in the art. In the drawings and specification, there have been disclosed illustrative embodiments of the subject disclosure and, although specific terms are employed, they are used in a generic and descriptive sense only and not for the purpose of limitation. Accordingly, the subject disclosure is therefore to be limited only by the scope of the appended claims. 
         [0032]    Referring to  FIG. 1 , a sectional schematic view of an embodiment of an EPC  10  applied to a surface  12  is shown. The surface may be, any surface subjected to an ultra high temperature and can include a surface on a vehicle, an aircraft, a water craft, a space craft as well as, a turbine blade surface, exhaust washed surfaces, or an aircraft wing surface subjected to high temperature environments. The EPC  10  is capable of operating at ultra high temperatures, i.e. 
         [0033]    more than 3000 degree F. 
         [0034]    The EPC  10  includes a microstructure of platelets  14  held together by binder material  16 . The platelets  14  have a thickness of from about 5 microns to 25 microns, with a length to thickness (L/T) ratio of from 5 to 20, and are resistant to temperatures above 3000 degree F. Optionally, the platelets  14  may be arranged in a lamellar or nacreous fashion, and may further optionally have a coefficient of thermal expansion that ranges from about 50% to about 150% of the thermal expansion of the material of the surface  12 . Nacreous refers to the similarity in the layering of platelets to that seen in nacre or shells. In an example embodiment, staggered lamellar or nacreous layering results in spaces  13  between adjacent platelets  14  that are laterally offset from spaces  13  between adjacent platelets  14  in at least a next layer  15  of platelets  14 . Optionally, the spaces  13  between adjacent platelets  14  may be offset along multiple layers of platelets  14 . The platelets  14  provide structure, strength, and impermeability to the EPC  10  and may be formed from one or a combination of the following: a refractory oxide, mixed refractory oxides, refractory ceramics, refractory metals or alloys, inter-metallic compounds. Specific examples of materials for use in forming the platelets  14  include ZrB 2 , Ta, Cr, CrO 2 , CaO 2 , MgO 2 , metal nitrides, such as SiN, HfN, TaN, ZrN, ScN, YN, NB 2 N, NbN, Be 3 N 2 , Ta 2 N, Th 3 N 2 , VN, Ba 3 N 2 , AlN, UN, TlN, and BN; intermetallic compounds, such as ReW, Re 24 T 15 , OsTa 3 , WPl, IrTa 3 , PtRe, Ir 3 Nb, Ir 3 Tl, HfMo 2 , OsTl, RuTl, W 2 Zr, Nb 3 Sn, RhTa 3 , IrTl, IrNb 2 , YBl, Cr 2 Ta, Be 13 Zr, UBe 13 , Al 2 Mo, Rh 3 Ta, RuZr, IrNb 3 , IrTa, IrNb 3 , Mo 3 Al, GeMo 5 , ZrGe, Zr 2 Ge, Ir 3 Tl, Re 3 Mo 2 , OsTa 3 , Re 3 W 2 ; silicides such as, Nb 5 Si 3 , Hf 3 Si 2 , W 5 Si 3 , Zr 5 Si 3 , TaSi2, HfSi, Mo 3 Si 2 , WSi 2 , Ti 5 Si 3 , Mo 5 Si, MoSi 2 , ZrSi, Zr 3 Si 2 , V 5 Si 3 , Zr 2 Si, Zr 4 Si 3 , Zr 6 Si 5 , Hf 5 Si 3 , Ta 2 Si, and Ta 5 Si 3 ; silicates such as Mg 2 SiO 4 , Ca 2 SiO 4 , BaSiO 4 , SaSiO 4 , ZrSiO 3 , ZrSiO 4 , and SrSiO 4 ; oxides, such as MgV 2 O 4 , Nd 4 SrO3, Ca 3 TtO 5 , MgAl 2 O 4 , MgZrO 3 , Be 3 Zr 2 O 7 , Eu 2 O 3 , CaCrO 4 , Gd 2 O 3 , BeZr 2 O 3 , BaThO, La 2 O 3 , Sn 2 O, Y 2 O 3 , Yb 2 O 3 , LaHfO 3 , LaCrO 3 , Ce 2 O 3 , BaZrO 3 , SrZrO 3 , Zr) 2 —Eu 2 O 3 , SrHfO 3 , SrZrO 3 , HfO 2 , ThZrO 4 , ThO 2 , UO 2 , MgO, ZrO 2 , Sr 4 Zr 3 O 10 , CaO, BeO, Sc2O 3 , CeCr 2 O 5 , SrO, DyO 2 , Dy 2 O 3 , CaZrO 3 , Cr 2 O 3 , PuO 2 , Pu2O3, CaCr 2 O 4 , NiAl 2 O 4 , Al 2 O 3 , La 2 MgO 3 , Al 2 BaO 4 , Al 2 NiO 4 , Cr 2 MgO 4 , Al 2 NiO 4 , SiO, HfO, SiO, TiO, and Al 2 SrO 4 ; carbides, such as metal carbides, including BoC 2 , Ni 3 C, GdC 2  , Be 2 C, YC 2 , Co 2 C, UC, BC, Ce 4 C, Al 4 C 3 , MoC, Mo 2 C, SiC, VC, WC, NB 2 C, TiC, W 2 C, THC 2 , THC, PrC 2 , U 2 C 3 , LaC 2 , LaC, UC 2 , Co 3 C, CaC 2 , SnC 2 , NdC 2 , V 2 C, La 2 C 3 , HfC; MAX phase type high temperature compounds, and combinations thereof. 
         [0035]    A binder  16  is shown in the spaces between adjacent platelets  14 . In an example embodiment, the binder  16  (that may also be referred to as a mortar) is relatively softer than the platelets  14 . Optionally, the binder  16  is made up of a binder resin and particulate matter for setting the spacing between the platelets  14 . As will be discussed in more detail below, the binder  16  of the present disclosure may include additional additives. In an example embodiment, the platelets  14  can have a Young&#39;s modulus of around 5×10 6  to 60×10 6  pounds per square inch; the Young&#39;s modulus of the binder  16  may range from about 0.1% to about 10% of the Young&#39;s modulus of the platelets  14 . The binder  16  provides flexibility and toughness to the EPC  10 . The composition of the binder  16  will be explained in more detail in a subsequent section. 
         [0036]    Referring now to  FIGS. 3 and 3A , an advantage of the present disclosure is illustrated by how the staggered lamellar arrangement of platelets  14  within the EPC  10  resists oxygen O 2  migration to the surface  12  by forming a tortuous path  20  for the oxygen, O 2 , flowing within the binder  16  and between the platelets  14 . Moreover, as shown in  FIGS. 3 and 3A , resistance to migration introduced by the tortuous path  20  is further enhanced by disposing oxidizable matter within the binder  16 . The oxidizable matter can be made up of refractory metals, intermetallics, metals such as Al, Si, Ti, Ni, Zn, Mg, or un-oxidized constituent materials for use in forming the platelets  14  listed above. When contacted and oxidized by the migrating O 2 , the volume of the oxidizable matter increases and may possess fluxing abilities expanding, wetting and sealing cracks formed by thermal expansion and thermal volatization of lower temperature refractories, thereby resisting O 2  flow through the binder  16 . The oxidizable matter can be provided in the binder  16  as particulates, solid solutions, or as a coating on another particulate. In an example embodiment, the oxidizable matter in the binder  16  oxides to form glass oxides  22  when contacted by the migrating oxygen O 2 . As noted above, the oxides  22  can fill cracks, interstices, and voids in the binder  16  so that the binder  16  becomes a barrier to oxygen O 2  flow; making it more difficult for the oxygen O 2  to navigate through the binder  16 , thereby protecting the surface  12  from oxidation. 
         [0037]    The production of oxides  22  by oxidizable elements of EPC  10 , phase changes, and thermal expansion of base  12 , EPC  10 , platelets  14  and binder  16 , at operating temperature increase their respective volumes, which can potentially lead to the EPC  10  failing due to differential volume increase and resulting strain buildup. To allow for the increase in volume and provide strain release, the binder  16  includes porous or easily cleaved particulates  42  ( FIG. 4 ) of refractory materials. The particulates  42  ( FIG. 4 ) provide the binder  16  of the EPC  10  with low stress, high strain free volume necessary to accommodate the increased volume due to the oxide growth  20  and thermal strains produced. In an example, high strain deflection is greater parallel to the elongated sides of the platelet  14  to provide maximum strain release in-plane. The platelets  14  together with the micro-structure of the binder  16  result in a tough EPC  10  that can protect a surface  12  from ultra high temperatures and oxidation and provide the flexibility and free volume to accommodate oxide formation and thermal expansion mismatches. In an example embodiment, the free volume locations in the binder  16  are randomly and/or irregularly spaced to thereby introduce multiple degrees of freedom within the EPC  10 . The free volume can absorb strain in any direction, thereby correspondingly reducing or eliminating stress (in any direction) in the EPC  10  that might result from the strain. 
         [0038]    The EPC  10  may be manufactured using various methods. One embodiment of the manufacturing process to produce the EPC  10  is illustrated in  FIGS. 4-6 . As shown in  FIG. 4 , the binder material  16  ( FIG. 1 ) can be formulated by utilizing a skeleton or scaffold  40  made from carbon, lower temperature materials of the same candidates for the oxidizable matter within the binder  16 , or other volatizable material. The skeleton  40  may be a hollow member made up of particulate matter, preferably with a high aspect cross-section shape for low stiffness in one or more axes and with short length L to depth D (L/D) ratio that has a size in the sub-micron range to allow better processing, as shown in  FIG. 4  or alternatively  FIGS. 9 and 10 . In an example embodiment, the L/D ratio can range from about 1 to about 10, in one embodiment the L/D ratio can range from about 2 to about 5. Once the desired skeleton  40  is provided, the skeleton  40  may be coated with a layer of refractory metal  42 , refractory oxide, or their precursors, such as pre-ceramic polymer or vapor deposited components. The refractory layer  42  can then be oxidized while the skeleton  40  is vaporized slowly and allowed to permeate through the refractory layer  42  such that it is removed from the system without damage to the coating. The result is a refractory oxide shell  43  that takes on the general shape of the removed skeleton  40  and that has a hollow space  44  within, as shown in  FIG. 5 . The hollow space  44  in the shell  43  provides free internal volume in the binder  16  ( FIG. 1 ) that will allow for strain release associated with oxide  20  ( FIG. 3 ) production during operation. 
         [0039]    The high strain constituents may include one or two dimensional semi-crystalline or crystalline compounds, fractal morphologies, or constructions of stable and fugitive chemistries, and/or combinations thereof. The materials possess easily strained bonds or free volume with multi-axial or random axial orientation. The free volume is produced during a pre-firing procedure before use which produces thermal shrinkage upon cooling, cleavage of the weak bonds and the free volume desired. Other fugitive components increase the generation of free volume utilized by these cleaved constituents to produce a highly compliant micro-structure. Graphite, zirconia diboride(gr), boron nitride(gr), mica and acicular wollastonite and zirconium mullite are examples of suitable crystalline materials. High intensity ball milling of C(gr) is an example of mechanical forming of sub-micron or nano-platelet compositions with minimal bonding and fugitive character in oxidizing environment. Eutectics can produce very fine, fractal morphologies, some of these compositions have ultra high temperature ceramics and an oxidatively fugitive phase such as a Mo—ZrC system. These constituents produce short range, strain capability as-made or as-pyrolyzed or oxidized, that can be randomly oriented as required to yield planar quasi-isotropic compliance. 
         [0040]    Referring to  FIGS. 6 and 6A , the refractory oxide, high aspect ratio shells  43  can then be compounded with a mixture  46  that may include short fibers  48 , ceramic mortar  50 , sub-micron refractory metal powder  52 , and fluxing elements  54 . The short fibers  48  may be formed from ceramics or their precursors and have a length/depth ratio less than  20 , and optionally less than  10 . The ceramic mortar  50  can be made from ceramic binder material; examples of the sub-micron refractory metal powder  52  include Al, Hf, Si, Zr, Ta, Mg, and Ca. The sub-micron refractory metal powder  52  gives the binder  16  ( FIG. 1 ) sealing capability against hot environmental gases via volume expanding oxide formation. The fluxing elements  54  may be anything that induces chemical activity during expected operational conditions, examples of fluxing elements  54  include boron, carbon, silicon, aluminum, titanium, tantalum, phosphorus, or others. Optionally, the fluxing element  54  may include the same candidate materials for the oxidizable matter within the binder  16 . In an example embodiment, the fluxing elements  54  are disposed within one or more of the shells  43  and intermixed within the binder  16 . In an example of use of this embodiment, the fluxing elements  54  are exposed to temperatures greater than at which they become active or mobile, thereby causing softening and chemical reactions through the binder  16 . As such, the fluxing elements  54  are used to enhance wetting, adhesion and sealing of the EPC  10 . The mixture  46  is mixed in a ball milled together with the refractory oxide shells  43  into a smooth paste that has the capability of spacing the platelets  14  ( FIG. 1 ) from about 5% to about 100% of the platelet  14  thickness. In an example embodiment the constituent materials  48 ,  50 ,  52 ,  54  making up the paste have a particulate length approximately 50% to about 100% that of the platelets  14  spacing. The resulting paste forms the binder (mortar) material  16  used to hold together the platelets  14 . 
         [0041]    Once the binder  16  is prepared, the platelets  14  are added in and mixed thoroughly to wet all surfaces of the platelets  14  with binder  16 . Solvents or fugitive resins may be used as necessary to add processability to the fully formulated EPC  10  thereby forming a paste. The EPC  10  paste is applied to the surface  12  ( FIG. 1 ), dried at a rate to minimize gas bubble formation, and is pre-fired to remove low temperature additives and fluxes. The EPC  10  may be fired to near anticipated operating temperature at rates that allow off-gassing of volatile compounds and impurities to proceed by molecular diffusion. The firing temperature can range from 50% to about 100% of expected operating temperature, but will depend on chemistry of the constituents. The platelets may have various geometries. For example, the platelets may be flat plates  60  arranged as shown in  FIG. 7  or disks  70  as shown in  FIG. 8 . Each application of EPC  10  to a surface  12  may have a thickness of from about 0.05 millimeters up to about 0.5 millimeters. 
         [0042]    Applying multiple layers of the EPC  10  to the surface  12  ( FIG. 1 ) can provide flexibility in matching performance with materials and allows a certain amount of redundancy for geometry controlled heating. Aero-surfaces geometries and impinging airflow vary significantly, as does the resultant equilibrium temperature due to aero-thermal heating. The substrate is typically a single material with a single maximum use temperature. If no appropriate substrate material is available or a lower temperature material has superior performance, extra EPC thickness can reduce the exposure of the surface  12  to allow its use, especially for sharp radii leading edges. If a single chemistry is not compatible with the increased temperatures and the surface  12  matrix, multiple EPC formulation may be applied in layers to vary the properties to the local environment and improve compatibility. Thus, a family of compatible EPCs  10  may be used to match the maximum temperature of varying geometry and airflow to allow lower temperature materials or severe geometric features. In addition, as EPC  10  recession occurs, a benign failure mode may be achieved as single EPC layer failure does not immediately expose the surface  12 . As such, a color-coded system may be used to provide an early warning of degradation. For example, different regions of a blade or hypersonic leading edge on an aircraft wing can have a wide range of temperatures that increases as the radii decreases. The design of EPC system can thus be selected to match the operational temperature due to the radii and airflow and also achieve a benign and inspectable failure mode. 
         [0043]    In an example embodiment, the EPC  10  described herein has the high barrier properties of a nacreous or lamellar composite, the toughness of a soft, ceramic binder  16  reinforced with the stiff, strong platelet  14  and the sealing capabilities of a chemical composition which forms stable, viscous oxides  22 , with a final volume greater than the original coating constituent to ensure crack sealing. The EPC  10  may be used to retrofit existing applications and repair damaged units. The EPC  10  may be applied to a surface in various ways. For example, the EPC  10  may be applied as a paste or diluted and sprayed onto a surface. A sheet or film of the EPC  10  may also be fabricated that can be adhered to a surface. 
         [0044]    Although the present invention has been described in detail herein with reference to the illustrative embodiments, it should be understood that the description is by way of example only and is not to be construed in a limiting sense. It is to be further understood, therefore, that numerous changes in the details of the embodiments of this invention and additional embodiments of this invention will be apparent to, and may be made by, persons of ordinary skill in the art having reference to this description. It is contemplated that all such changes and additional embodiments are within the spirit and true scope of this invention as claimed below.