Patent ID: 7629022

Claim:
A method for forming a layer of flaky particles, comprising the steps of: preparing flaky particles whose long side is 0.1 mm to 0.001 mm in length and whose thickness is ½ or less of the long side of a flat surface thereof by breaking or grinding or cutting materials to be injected in a flake shape allowing to ensure collision energy to generate heat to give rise to fusion between the flaky particles and the workpiece by collision of the flaky particles to be injected to the workpiece; continuously injecting the flaky particles together with a compressed gas having a flow velocity of 150 m/s or more, or an injection pressure of 0.4 MPa or more onto a layer-forming surface of a workpiece so that the injected flaky particles are collided with the surface of the workpiece while spinning in a turbulent gas, and the flaky particles, which are continuously injected from an injection nozzle and subsequently reach the surface of the workpiece, collide with flaky particles having already reached the surface of the workpiece, to which the injection pressure of the compressed gas to inject the flaky particles is also applied whereby the flat surface of the flaky particle is oriented to be in line with the surface of the workpiece; generating heat at a point of collision between the flaky particles and the surface of the workpiece, melting the workpiece and/or the flaky particle at the point of collision and fusing the flaky particles to the surface of the workpiece at a boundary portion between the workpiece and the flaky particle without melting the flaky particle completely in a condition of which the flat surface of the flaky particle is oriented to be in line with the surface of the workpiece, so that the flaky particles are exposed on the surface of the workpiece without the aid of a binder, and generating heat at a collision point in which the subsequent flaky particles collide with the flake particles that have already reached the surface of the workpiece to bond the flaky particles which are laminated, each other without the aid of the binder.