Functional Treatments
Technical silvering
Functional Treatments
Technical silvering
Functional treatments: technical silvering
What is technical silvering?
Silver plating is an electrolytic process of deposition of silver to take advantage of its electrical conductivity and low contact resistance characteristics.
Common customer specifications call for deposits of 0.5 to 10 microns, but in some cases we apply thicknesses as thick as 50 microns. For small parts we have rotobarrel silvering, for larger parts or where we want to preserve the aesthetics or surface of the part we have a frame system.
The aesthetic appearance is a brilliant white characteristic of technical electrolytic silver plating, different from “silver plated” which is instead only an aesthetic finish.
How does the process take place?
The oxide that is formed is not due to material input but to a transformation of the original surface of the object. The aluminum surface undergoing anodizing is progressively oxidized from the outside of the surface progressing inward. The ‘oxide that is formed has a larger volume than the original metal (aluminum) so that apparently, from a dimensional point of view, it seems away is a material contribution, in reality the thickness of oxide partly “penetrates” into the metal partly “grows” outward. In practice for a thickness of e.g. 10 microns, 5 microns penetrated and 5 microns expanded so the geometric increase amounts to 5 microns. Note that, on a diameter, the 10-micron thickness produces an increase in diameter of 10 microns, not 20.
Oxide also tends to form fairly uniformly in recesses, undercuts, and inside pipes. The structure of the oxide is very similar to the “honeycomb” structure with vertical tubules with respect to the thickness formed. These tubules are much less than a micron in diameter, but particular dyes can penetrate them, being able to impart a wide variety of colorations to the oxide layer. Following the formation of the oxide layer and, eventual staining, a pore-closing operation is performed in order to ensure compactness and corrosion resistance. This operation is called fixing and can be done cold or hot. in any case the pores are closed, however, it turns out to be safer to heat fix especially for colored oxide layers.
Functional treatments: technical silvering
What is technical silvering?
Silver plating is an electrolytic process of deposition of silver to take advantage of its electrical conductivity and low contact resistance characteristics.
The most common customer specifications call for deposits of 0.5 to 10 microns, but in some cases we apply thicknesses as thick as 50 microns. For small parts we have rotobarrel silvering, for larger parts or where we want to preserve the aesthetics or surface of the part we have a frame system.
The aesthetic appearance is a brilliant white characteristic of technical electrolytic silver plating, different from “silver plated” which is instead only an aesthetic finish.
How does the process take place?
The oxide that is formed is not due to material input but to a transformation of the original surface of the object. The aluminum surface undergoing anodizing is progressively oxidized from the outside of the surface progressing inward. The ‘oxide that is formed has a larger volume than the original metal (aluminum) so that apparently, from a dimensional point of view, it seems away is a material contribution, in reality the thickness of oxide partly “penetrates” into the metal partly “grows” outward. In practice for a thickness of e.g. 10 microns, 5 microns penetrated and 5 microns expanded so the geometric increase amounts to 5 microns. Note that, on a diameter, the 10-micron thickness produces an increase in diameter of 10 microns, not 20.
Oxide also tends to form fairly uniformly in recesses, undercuts, and inside pipes. The structure of the oxide is very similar to the “honeycomb” structure with vertical tubules with respect to the thickness formed. These tubules are much less than a micron in diameter, but particular dyes can penetrate them, being able to impart a wide variety of colorations to the oxide layer. Following the formation of the oxide layer and, eventual staining, a pore-closing operation is performed in order to ensure compactness and corrosion resistance. This operation is called fixing and can be done cold or hot. in any case, the pores are closed; however, it turns out to be safer to heat fix especially for colored oxide layers.
Treatable materials
- Steel
- Stainless steel
- Tempered steel
- Iron
- Copper
- Brass
- Zama
- Aluminum
- Sintered
Regulations
- UNI-ISO 4521
Possible finishes
- White passivation (chrome 3)
- High strength passivation (chrome 3)
- Black passivation (chrome 3)
Maximum treatable size
900x400x400 mm
Treatable materials
- Steel
- Stainless steel
- Tempered steel
- Iron
- Copper
- Brass
- Zama
- Aluminum
- Sintered
Possible finishes
- White passivation (chrome 3)
- High strength passivation (chrome 3)
- Black passivation (chrome 3)
Regulations
- UNI-ISO 4521
Maximum treatable size
900x400x400 mm
Sectors
implementing
implementing