enow.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: black electroless nickel plating

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Electroless nickel-phosphorus plating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electroless_nickel...

    The main ingredients of an electroless nickel plating bath are source of nickel cations Ni 2+, usually nickel sulfate and a suitable reducing agent, such as hypophosphite H 2 PO − 2 or borohydride BH − 4. [1] With hypophosphite, the main reaction that produces the nickel plating yields orthophosphite H 2 PO − 3, elemental phosphorus ...

  3. Electroless nickel-boron plating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electroless_nickel-boron...

    Electroless nickel-boron plating developed as a variant of the similar nickel-phosphorus process, discovered accidentally by Charles Adolphe Wurtz in 1844. [2]In 1969, Harold Edward Bellis from DuPont filed a patent for a general class of electroless plating processes using sodium borohydride, dimethylamine borane, or sodium hypophosphite, in the presence of thallium salts, thus producing a ...

  4. Nickel electroplating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nickel_electroplating

    "Black nickel" is a dark coating that consists primarily of nickel sulfide and metallic zinc and nickel. [14] It is typically plated on brass, bronze, or steel in order to produce a non-reflective surface. [15] This type of plating is used for decorative and military purposes and does not offer much protection. [1] [2] [15]

  5. Electroless deposition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electroless_deposition

    Electroless nickel plating uses nickel salts as the metal cation source and either hypophosphite (H 2 PO 2-) (or a borohydride-like compound) as a reducer. [6] A side reaction forms elemental phosphorus (or boron) which is incorporated in the coating. The classical deposition methods follows the following steps:

  6. Electroless nickel immersion gold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electroless_nickel...

    Electroless nickel immersion gold (ENIG or ENi/IAu), also known as immersion gold (Au), chemical Ni/Au or soft gold, is a metal plating process used in the manufacture of printed circuit boards (PCBs), to avoid oxidation and improve the solderability of copper contacts and plated through-holes.

  7. Electrochemical coloring of metals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrochemical_coloring...

    Black nickel plating was developed around 1905, and between the two wars, black chrome plating (first German patent 1929.GP 607, 420), which saw wider use only from the mid-1950s. [14] After the First World War, the first procedures for anodic oxidation and coloring of anodically oxidized aluminium were developed (1923, 1924.DRP. 413876).

  1. Ads

    related to: black electroless nickel plating