Mastering Surface Treatment & Coating Processes
A comprehensive guide to industrial surface engineering — the science and practice of transforming a component's surface properties through electroplating, phosphating, PVD, CVD, DLC, anodising, thermal spray, and powder coating, to deliver corrosion resistance, wear resistance, hardness, lubricity, or aesthetics far beyond what the base material alone can provide.
What is Surface Treatment & Why Does It Matter?
Almost every engineered component in industrial use is a compromise between what the core material needs to be — strong, machinable, affordable — and what the surface needs to do — resist corrosion, withstand abrasion, reduce friction, or carry an electrical current. These requirements are rarely satisfied by the same material simultaneously. Surface engineering resolves this conflict by separating the bulk and surface functions: the substrate provides structural performance while the surface treatment delivers the specific surface properties the application demands.
Surface treatment is the science and practice of deliberately modifying the surface of a component — through chemical reaction, electrochemical deposition, physical vapour deposition, thermal application, or mechanical working — to achieve surface properties that differ from, and enhance, those of the underlying substrate. The treatment may add a distinct layer (coating) or transform the substrate surface itself (conversion coating or diffusion treatment).
The relationship between surface treatment and heat treatment is direct and complementary. Heat treatment modifies the bulk metallurgy of a component — hardening the core, adjusting toughness, relieving stress. Surface treatment modifies the outermost layer — the surface that actually contacts the operating environment, the mating part, the corrosive medium. A transmission gear may be carburised (heat treatment) to achieve a hard, fatigue-resistant case, then phosphated (surface treatment) to provide run-in lubrication and corrosion resistance during storage and initial service. These processes work together.
The performance of a component in service is determined not by its bulk properties alone but by the interaction between the surface and its environment. Surface engineering is the art of making that interaction work in the engineer's favour.
— Tom Bell, Professor of Surface Engineering, University of BirminghamElectroplating & Electroless Plating
Electroplating uses direct electrical current (DC) to deposit a metallic coating from an electrolyte solution onto a conductive substrate. The part to be coated becomes the cathode (negative electrode); the plating metal is typically dissolved in the bath and replenished by an anode of the same metal. Metal ions from the solution are reduced at the cathode surface, depositing as a continuous metallic film. Thickness is controlled by current density, bath concentration, and plating time — typically 5–50μm for most industrial applications.
The most important electroplating process in automotive manufacturing is zinc electroplating (also called zinc electrodeposition or MFZn2-C per ISO 4042 / DIN 50979). Zinc provides sacrificial corrosion protection — it corrodes preferentially to protect the underlying steel, even if the coating is scratched. A typical zinc-plated fastener carries a blue-white, yellow, or black trivalent chromium (Cr(III)) passivation layer on top of the zinc to extend corrosion resistance further, achieving 96–480+ hours in salt spray (ISO 9227) depending on post-treatment.
Hard chrome plating has been the industry-standard wear and corrosion coating for hydraulic cylinder rods, pump shafts, and precision bearings for decades — providing hardness of 850–1000 HV and excellent corrosion resistance. However, hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)) — used in traditional hard chrome baths — is a classified carcinogen under REACH and RoHS. The industry is actively transitioning to high-velocity oxygen-fuel (HVOF) tungsten carbide and electroless nickel as environmentally compliant hard chrome alternatives. Trivalent chrome (Cr(III)) decorative plating is already widely adopted in place of hexavalent decorative chrome.
Electroless nickel plating (EN) is particularly important: unlike electroplating, it requires no electrical current — deposition occurs via autocatalytic chemical reduction. This means EN deposits uniformly on every surface of a complex geometry — inside bores, recesses, blind holes — where line-of-sight or current-density limitations prevent uniform electroplating. EN with 8–11% phosphorus content is amorphous (no grain structure), extremely corrosion-resistant (500–1000+ hours salt spray), and achieves 500–700 HV hardness that can be raised to 900–1100 HV by heat treatment at 300–400°C. It is the preferred finish for hydraulic valve bodies, aerospace components, and precision mould tools.
Use zinc electroplating for general-purpose corrosion protection of steel fasteners and stampings at low cost. Use electroless nickel for complex geometries requiring uniform coverage, high corrosion resistance, and moderate hardness. Avoid hexavalent hard chrome for new designs — specify EN or HVOF tungsten carbide instead for REACH compliance.
Phosphating — Zinc, Iron, and Manganese
Phosphating is a chemical conversion coating process in which the steel surface reacts with a phosphoric acid solution to form an integral, micro-crystalline layer of insoluble metal phosphate. Unlike electroplating (which deposits a foreign metal on the surface), phosphating converts the steel surface itself — the phosphate crystals grow from and are chemically bonded to the substrate, making them integral to the surface rather than a discrete overlay. The resulting porous, crystalline layer is typically grey to dark grey in colour and 1–30μm thick.
There are three primary types: Zinc phosphate is the most widely used — it produces a medium-fine crystalline coating (5–15μm) that is the standard paint adhesion pretreatment for automotive body panels, chassis components, and appliance casings. The porous crystal structure provides mechanical key for paint and e-coat adhesion, dramatically reducing delamination and under-film corrosion propagation. Iron phosphate produces a thinner, amorphous coating (0.5–2.5μm) used as a rapid, low-cost pre-treatment for mild steel before powder coating or painting, where the highest corrosion performance is not required. Manganese phosphate is the most crystalline and thickest type (5–30μm), used specifically for its oil-retention capability — the deep, porous crystal structure holds lubricating oil like a microscopic sponge, making it the standard run-in treatment for gears, camshafts, crankshafts, and engine cylinder bores, where it reduces friction, prevents galling, and extends service life during the critical break-in period.
Phosphating is almost always followed by a supplementary treatment: for automotive body panels, a zinc phosphate line is followed by cathodic e-coat (electrophoretic paint), primer, base coat, and clear coat. For mechanical components, manganese phosphate is followed by immersion in oil or wax. The phosphate layer provides corrosion protection in its own right — but its greatest value is as a foundation for other protective systems, dramatically improving their adhesion and performance compared to application on bare steel.
Specify zinc phosphate as the standard pre-treatment before e-coat and paint on steel stampings. Specify manganese phosphate for gears, camshafts, and engine parts requiring oil-retaining run-in protection. For high-volume light fabrication with powder coating, iron phosphate provides adequate adhesion at lower cost and shorter cycle time.
PVD Coatings — TiN, TiCN, CrN, AlTiN & Beyond
Physical Vapour Deposition (PVD) is a vacuum-based coating process in which a solid source material is vaporised by physical means (heat, electron beam, or ion bombardment) and the resulting vapour travels through a vacuum chamber and condenses onto the substrate surface to form a thin, adherent film. No chemical reaction is strictly required in the simplest PVD processes (though reactive PVD introduces gases such as nitrogen or acetylene to form ceramic compounds at the substrate). The entire process occurs at 10⁻³ to 10⁻⁵ Pa vacuum and 150–500°C substrate temperature — cool enough to coat precision hardened tools without distortion.
The three main PVD sub-processes are sputtering (argon ions bombard the target, ejecting target atoms by momentum transfer — the most common industrial PVD method), arc evaporation (a high-current arc strikes the target, instantly evaporating material — produces denser, harder coatings with higher ionisation, preferred for hard cutting tool coatings), and electron beam evaporation (a focused electron beam evaporates the source material — used for optical coatings and thermal barrier coatings where high purity is critical).
The most widely used PVD coatings in cutting tool and mould applications are: TiN (titanium nitride — gold colour, 2300 HV, general purpose, widely recognisable), TiCN (titanium carbonitride — grey, 3000 HV, superior wear resistance over TiN), TiAlN / AlTiN (titanium-aluminium nitride — dark grey/violet, 3000–3500 HV, oxidation-resistant to 800°C, the dominant coating for high-speed machining of steel), and CrN (chromium nitride — silver, 2000 HV, excellent corrosion resistance and low friction, preferred for forming dies and plastic injection moulds).
PVD is environmentally far cleaner than electroplating — no toxic aqueous waste, no hexavalent chromium — making it the preferred hard coating technology for new designs where both performance and sustainability matter. The line-of-sight limitation (vapour travels in straight lines through vacuum) means complex internal geometries receive less uniform coverage — addressed by rotating workpiece fixtures and multi-arc cathode configurations.
Specify TiAlN/AlTiN for high-speed dry machining of steel and cast iron — its oxidation resistance at 800°C allows high cutting speeds without coolant. Use CrN for forming dies, deep drawing tools, and plastic injection moulds where corrosion resistance and release properties matter more than maximum hardness. PVD is the go-to choice when the dimensional change must be negligible and the substrate is already precision-hardened and ground.
CVD Coatings — TiC, Al₂O₃, TiN Multi-Layer & PACVD
Chemical Vapour Deposition (CVD) deposits coatings through chemical reactions between gaseous precursors at or near the substrate surface, rather than physical vapour transport. Reactive gases (e.g. TiCl₄ + N₂ + H₂ to form TiN, or TiCl₄ + CH₄ + H₂ to form TiC) are introduced into a heated reactor chamber; the reaction produces the coating compound which deposits as a coherent film on every surface the gas can reach. This non-line-of-sight deposition is CVD's key advantage over PVD — complex internal geometries, deep holes, and undercut features receive uniform coating coverage.
Thermal CVD (conventional CVD) operates at 900–1100°C — too hot for high-speed steel or most pre-hardened tools, but ideal for cemented carbide (WC-Co) cutting inserts, which are used in the as-coated condition. The high temperature enables thick, well-adhered multi-layer coatings: a typical MTCVD (medium-temperature CVD) coated carbide insert for turning steel carries a TiN base layer (adhesion), followed by TiCN (wear resistance), followed by Al₂O₃ (thermal barrier — alumina is chemically inert and prevents crater wear at the chip-tool interface), topped by a TiN outer layer (gold colour for visual wear indicator). Total coating thickness is 8–20μm — thicker than PVD but with the same excellent hardness and even better high-temperature stability.
Plasma-Assisted CVD (PACVD) — also called PECVD (Plasma Enhanced CVD) — uses plasma to activate the precursor gases at much lower temperatures (150–550°C), extending CVD to temperature-sensitive substrates. PACVD is the standard process for depositing DLC (diamond-like carbon) coatings and is widely used in the automotive valvetrain, fuel injection components, and precision gear coatings. It bridges the gap between PVD (low temperature, line-of-sight) and thermal CVD (high temperature, uniform coverage).
Specify thermal CVD (MTCVD) multi-layer coatings for cemented carbide indexable inserts — the standard choice for high-productivity turning, milling, and drilling of steel and cast iron. The Al₂O₃ layer is unique to CVD and provides thermal protection unavailable in PVD. Use PACVD/DLC for valvetrain components, fuel system parts, and precision gears where temperature constraints prevent thermal CVD.
DLC — Diamond-Like Carbon Coatings
Diamond-Like Carbon (DLC) is an amorphous carbon coating that combines properties of both diamond (extreme hardness, chemical inertness) and graphite (low friction). Deposited by PACVD or magnetron sputtering, DLC coatings consist of sp³ (diamond-bonded) and sp² (graphite-bonded) carbon atoms in a disordered network — the ratio of sp³ to sp² bonds determines the coating's hardness, friction, and thermal stability. DLC has become the critical enabling technology for efficiency-driven tribological applications where conventional lubricants are insufficient or where dry running is required.
The automotive industry is the largest consumer of DLC coatings. Valvetrain components (camshaft lobes, follower faces, rocker arms, tappets) coated with DLC achieve coefficient of friction values of 0.05–0.15 — compared to 0.08–0.15 for conventional engine oil boundary lubrication — reducing parasitic engine friction and improving fuel economy. Fuel injection components (pump plungers, injector needles, delivery valves) operate at pressures up to 2500 bar in direct injection systems; DLC provides the wear resistance and surface hardness needed at these extreme conditions with zero tolerance for debris generation. Piston rings coated with DLC or CrDLC reduce top-ring friction in the critical zone near TDC where oil film is thinnest.
Beyond automotive, DLC is extensively used in medical implants (orthopaedic bearing surfaces, cardiovascular device components) where its biocompatibility, chemical inertness, and extreme hardness make it superior to conventional implant coatings. In precision manufacturing, DLC-coated punches and blanking dies in electronics stamping achieve dramatically extended tool life when producing copper, aluminium, and stainless steel components where conventional tool steels would gall or cold-weld to the work material.
Specify DLC for any tribological application where reducing friction is the primary objective — valvetrain, fuel injection, precision bearings, forming tools handling non-ferrous materials. Be aware of the temperature limit (~350°C continuous); for higher temperatures, specify tungsten-modified DLC (a-C:H:W/WCC) or switch to CrAlN PVD. Adhesion is critical — all DLC coatings require an intermediate adhesion layer (typically CrN or WC/C) matched to substrate material.
Anodising — Type II, Type III Hard Anodise & Colour
Anodising is an electrochemical process that deliberately grows a controlled oxide layer on the surface of aluminium (and titanium, magnesium) by making the part the anode in an electrolytic bath. Unlike electroplating (which deposits a foreign metal on the surface), anodising grows an aluminium oxide (Al₂O₃) layer that is integral to the substrate — half of the coating thickness grows outward from the original surface, half grows inward. The resulting oxide is: extremely hard (1500–2000 HV for hard anodise), electrically insulating, chemically inert, and — uniquely — naturally porous with a hexagonal columnar structure that can absorb dyes or sealing compounds.
Type II sulphuric acid anodising (5–25μm) is the standard decorative and corrosion-protective finish for aluminium consumer products, architectural extrusions, and general engineering components. The anodic oxide can be dyed virtually any colour before sealing, giving architects and product designers the full colour palette with a finish that is integral to the aluminium — not a paint layer that can peel or chip. Type III hard anodising (25–100μm, performed at lower temperature and higher current density) produces a harder, denser oxide with hardness of 400–500 HV, used for aerospace actuator housings, hydraulic components, textile machinery, and any aluminium component requiring wear resistance comparable to hard chrome. Apple's MacBook and iPhone use Type III hard anodising on their aluminium enclosures — the same process used on F-16 fighter aircraft hydraulic valve bodies.
Titanium anodising operates differently — titanium oxide grows by colour interference at different oxide thicknesses, producing vivid structural colours (gold, purple, blue, teal, green) without dye. This is used extensively in medical implants for identification of different implant sizes, in jewellery, and in aerospace fasteners for corrosion identification. The colour indicates coating thickness, which can be used as a traceability marker.
Use Type II anodising for corrosion protection and colour on aluminium consumer products, architectural, and general engineering applications. Specify Type III hard anodising for aluminium components requiring wear resistance, electrical insulation, and dimensional stability at elevated temperatures. Note that dimensional change is significant for Type III (up to 50μm per side) — allow for this in precision machining tolerances.
Thermal Spray — HVOF, Plasma Spray & Arc Wire
Thermal spray processes melt or soften a coating material (metal, ceramic, cermet) and accelerate it as a stream of molten or semi-molten droplets onto the substrate surface, where it impacts, flattens, and rapidly solidifies to form a laminar, mechanically bonded coating. Unlike PVD/CVD (atomic-scale deposition) or electroplating (ion reduction), thermal spray builds up coatings by rapid impact and solidification of discrete particles — producing coatings 50–2000μm thick that can restore worn or undersized components to drawing dimensions without the heat distortion of welding.
High-Velocity Oxygen-Fuel (HVOF) is the most important thermal spray process for engineering applications. Fuel gas (hydrogen, propylene, or kerosene) burns with oxygen at supersonic velocities (up to Mach 6), propelling fine WC-Co (tungsten carbide-cobalt) or WC-CoCr powder at 600–900 m/s. Impact at these velocities produces extremely dense, low-porosity (<1%) coatings with tensile bond strength of 70–80 MPa and hardness of 1100–1400 HV. HVOF WC-Co is the premier replacement for hard chrome plating on hydraulic cylinder rods, landing gear components, and pump shafts — offering equivalent or better wear performance with no hexavalent chromium hazard.
Plasma spray uses a plasma arc (temperatures up to 15,000°C) to melt even the highest-melting-point materials, including ceramics. Its primary application is depositing Thermal Barrier Coatings (TBC) — typically 7% yttria-stabilised zirconia (YSZ) — on turbine blades and combustor sections of gas turbines and jet engines. The TBC acts as thermal insulation, allowing the gas temperature to exceed the metal's melting point while the metal surface temperature remains within its operating limit. Every modern aircraft engine and industrial gas turbine uses plasma-sprayed TBC.
Arc wire spray uses an electric arc between two wire electrodes to melt the wire tips, with compressed air atomising and propelling the melt onto the substrate. It is the most cost-effective thermal spray process for large-area corrosion protection — zinc or aluminium wire coatings on structural steel, bridges, offshore platforms, and industrial equipment where long-term galvanic corrosion protection over large areas is required.
Specify HVOF WC-Co as the standard hard chrome replacement for hydraulic rods, landing gear, and pump shafts — it satisfies REACH/RoHS and performs equal to or better than hard chrome. Use plasma spray YSZ for turbine thermal barrier coatings. Use arc wire zinc/aluminium for large-area structural corrosion protection where the economics of electroplating would be prohibitive. Thermal spray requires grit blast surface preparation (Sa 2.5 per ISO 8501-1) for adequate adhesion.
Powder Coating & E-Coat
Powder coating is a dry finishing process where electrostatically charged thermosetting or thermoplastic polymer powder is sprayed onto a grounded metal part, then cured in an oven at 160–220°C to flow and cross-link into a continuous, smooth film. Because it contains no solvents, powder coating has near-zero VOC emissions — a major environmental advantage over liquid paint — and produces a thicker, more uniform film (60–120μm typical) in a single application with no runs, drips, or sags. Transfer efficiency exceeds 95% when oversprayed powder is collected and reused.
Cathodic electrophoretic coating (e-coat or KTL — Kathodische Tauchlackierung) is the standard automotive primer applied after zinc phosphating on car bodies. The body shell is immersed in a tank of waterborne paint, and DC current deposits the paint uniformly on every surface — inside pillars, inside sill sections, the internal surfaces of body cavities that spraying cannot reach. E-coat is the foundation of the automotive paint system, providing the corrosion resistance baseline under the visible top coat. Modern automotive e-coat systems achieve 600–1000+ hours in neutral salt spray and outstanding chip resistance from stone impact.
Powder coating is used as the final visible finish on automotive wheels, bicycle frames, architectural aluminium (windows, curtain walls), domestic appliances, agricultural equipment, and outdoor furniture — anywhere a durable, UV-stable, decorative organic finish is required over a metalised substrate. The powder coating range encompasses standard epoxy-polyester (excellent corrosion resistance, slightly lower UV stability), polyester (best UV stability for outdoor applications), polyurethane (flexibility and chemical resistance), and FEVE fluoropolymer (highest UV stability for architectural curtain walls — 20+ year colour retention).
Use cathodic e-coat as the standard primer on automotive body shells — it is mandatory for OEM-level corrosion performance. Specify polyester powder for outdoor architectural aluminium and automotive wheels. Use epoxy-polyester for indoor and under-bonnet applications. Powder coating requires phosphate or alternative conversion coat pretreatment for full corrosion performance — bare steel powder coating without pretreatment will fail under-film at edges and scratches.
Selecting the Right Surface Treatment — Complete Comparison Matrix
Choosing the right surface treatment requires balancing multiple competing requirements: required surface property (hardness, corrosion resistance, friction, appearance), substrate material and condition, dimensional tolerance (some processes add significant thickness), operating temperature, environmental compliance, and cost. The matrix below consolidates all eight processes for rapid comparison.
| Process | Thickness | Hardness | Corrosion Resistance | Friction / Wear | Substrate | Temp Sensitivity | Environment | Primary Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Electrochemical Processes | ||||||||
| Zinc Electroplating | 5–50μm | 70–120 HV | Good (sacrificial) | Low benefit | Steel, cast iron | ✓ <70°C bath | Cr(III) OK; Cr(VI) restricted | Fasteners, stampings, general corrosion |
| Electroless Nickel | 5–100μm | 500–1100 HV | Excellent | Good wear | Steel, Al, Cu | ✓ <90°C bath | Compliant | Complex geometries, valve bodies, moulds |
| Hard Chrome | 25–500μm | 850–1000 HV | Excellent | Low friction, excellent wear | Steel | ✓ <70°C bath | Cr(VI) — REACH restricted | Legacy hydraulics — specify HVOF or EN instead |
| Conversion Coatings | ||||||||
| Zinc Phosphate | 5–15μm | Low | Moderate (base for paint) | Low benefit | Steel | ✓ <95°C bath | Compliant | Paint adhesion primer — automotive body |
| Manganese Phosphate | 5–30μm | Low | Moderate (oil-sealed) | Oil retention — run-in | Steel | ✓ <95°C bath | Compliant | Gears, camshafts, engine run-in |
| Vapour Deposition (Dry Processes) | ||||||||
| PVD (TiAlN) | 1–5μm | 3000–3500 HV | Very good | Very low friction, extreme wear resistance | Steel, carbide, HSS | ✓ 150–500°C | Excellent — dry, no waste | Cutting tools, forming dies, precision moulds |
| CVD (TiCN/Al₂O₃) | 8–20μm | 2500–3500 HV | Excellent | Excellent wear, Al₂O₃ thermal barrier | Cemented carbide | ⚠ 900–1100°C | Excellent | Indexable carbide inserts for machining |
| DLC (a-C:H) | 0.5–5μm | 1500–6000 HV | Excellent | Lowest friction (μ 0.05–0.15) | Steel, carbide, Al | ✓ 150–400°C | Excellent | Valvetrain, fuel injection, precision forming |
| Surface Conversion & Build-Up Processes | ||||||||
| Anodising (Type III) | 25–100μm | 400–500 HV | Excellent for Al | Good wear | Aluminium alloys | ✓ 0–5°C bath | Compliant | Aerospace, hydraulics, consumer electronics |
| HVOF (WC-Co) | 50–500μm | 1100–1400 HV | Excellent | Outstanding wear and erosion | Steel (grit-blasted) | ✓ <200°C substrate | Excellent — Cr(VI) replacement | Hydraulic rods, landing gear, pump shafts |
| Powder Coating | 60–120μm | Organic — low | Good to Excellent | Scratch-resistant finish | Steel, Al, Zn die-cast | ✓ <220°C cure | Zero VOC | Wheels, appliances, architecture, general industry |
- Always specify pre-treatment (degreasing, grit blast, phosphating) — adhesion begins with surface cleanliness
- For PVD/CVD: confirm substrate tempering temperature exceeds coating process temperature to prevent softening
- For tight-tolerance precision parts: confirm dimensional change before specifying thick coatings (HVOF, hard anodise)
- Pair manganese phosphate with oil sealing — the coating alone provides minimal corrosion protection
- For REACH compliance: replace hard chrome with HVOF WC-Co on new designs; replace Cr(VI) passivation with Cr(III)
- Conduct salt spray testing (ISO 9227) and cross-hatch adhesion testing (ISO 2409) on every new coating specification
- Specify coating process on the drawing with thickness, standard reference, and acceptance test — never rely on supplier interpretation
- Applying PVD coating to a substrate hardened below the coating process temperature — substrate softens during deposition
- Specifying hard anodise on a 2000-series or 7075 aluminium alloy — high copper/zinc content causes non-uniform anodising
- Using thermal CVD (900°C) on HSS tooling — destroys hardening; only suitable for WC-Co carbide
- Powder coating without phosphating pretreatment — coating fails at edges and damaged areas due to no under-film corrosion inhibitor
- Specifying zinc plating for salt/coastal environments without additional barrier coat — zinc provides only ~96 hrs bare, degraded quickly
- Machining to final dimension before thermal spray HVOF — coating must be machined after deposition; allow 0.5–1mm per side material for post-coat grinding
- DLC over inadequate adhesion layer — delamination under tribological load; always specify intermediate CrN or WC/C bond coat
Summary
Surface treatment is not a cosmetic afterthought applied at the end of the manufacturing process — it is a core engineering decision made at the design stage that determines whether a component will survive its intended service life. The decision to use phosphate-and-oil on a gear, PVD TiAlN on a milling cutter, HVOF WC-Co on a hydraulic rod, or DLC on a valvetrain follower is as fundamental to the component's performance as the choice of substrate material, heat treatment cycle, or machined tolerance.
7-stage zinc phosphate → cathodic e-coat → primer → base coat → clear coat. Every passenger vehicle uses this exact sequence. Achieves 10-year corrosion warranty on modern vehicles.
PVD TiAlN/AlTiN on carbide and HSS tooling. CVD multi-layer (TiN/TiCN/Al₂O₃) on indexable inserts. Extends tool life 3–10× versus uncoated tooling in production machining.
HVOF WC-Co on landing gear (Cr(VI) replacement). Plasma spray YSZ TBC on turbine blades. Type III hard anodise on hydraulic actuators. PVD CrN on forming tooling.
DLC on camshaft lobes and valve followers. Manganese phosphate on gears and crankshafts. PVD CrN on piston rings. Electroless nickel on fuel injection valve bodies.
Type II anodising on aluminium extrusions and curtain wall panels. Polyester powder coat on steel and aluminium. PVDF/FEVE fluoropolymer for 20+ year UV-stable facade finishes.
DLC and TiN on orthopaedic implant bearing surfaces. Titanium anodising for size identification. Electroless nickel on precision medical instrument components requiring sterility and corrosion resistance.
Key Takeaway
Every surface treatment covered in this article solves a specific mismatch between what the bulk material provides and what the application demands. The engineer's skill is in identifying which mismatch — corrosion, wear, friction, dimension, appearance — is the binding constraint, and matching it to the process that addresses it most precisely and cost-effectively. A DLC coating at £30 per part on a valvetrain follower is excellent value if it eliminates a warranty claim and extends service intervals. Zinc phosphate at pennies per part on a fastener is equally correct when sacrificial corrosion protection and paint adhesion are all that's needed. The most expensive coating is never the right answer — the most precisely matched one is.
Start with the function the surface must perform. Match it to the process that delivers that function. Check dimensional, temperature, substrate compatibility, and environmental compliance constraints. Specify pretreatment explicitly. Define acceptance test and standard on the drawing. A coating without a specification is a wish; a specification without a test is unverifiable; a test without a standard is subjective. All three — process specification, dimensional requirement, and acceptance test — must appear on the engineering drawing for surface treatment to be controlled as a manufacturing process rather than left as a supplier preference.
Surface Treatment & Coating Processes · PVD · CVD · DLC · Electroplating · Phosphating · Anodising · Thermal Spray · Powder Coating · RMG Tech

