Title of Invention

NEW METAL STRIP PRODUCT.

Abstract The present invention relates to a coated steel strip product with a dense and hard abrasion resistant coating on one side or both sides of said strip. The thickness of said coating is in total maximally 25 µm, the hardness of said coating is at least 600 HV and the tensile strength of the steel strip substrate is at least 1200 MPa. The coating is preferably applied by electron beam evaporation and the coating may be, e.g., of Al2O3. The coated metal strip is useful for the manufacturing of doctor and coater blades for paper and printing industry.
Full Text The present invention relates to a new coated steel
strip material with a very hard and dense coating. It also
relates to a method of manufacturing sucn a coated steel
strip in a continuous roll-to-roll process which results in
a very good adhesion of a hard and dense coating on a metal
strip substrate. In particular, it relates to coated steel
strips, which have such a good adhesion of the hard coating
that they are suitable for use in coater and doctor blade
applications.
Background to the invention and prior Art
Doctor and coater blades are used in the manufacturing
of paper and in the printing industry, in order to scrape
paper and printing ink, respectively, from a rotating roll.
In connection to this, problems often arise with wear on
the roll and on the coater or doctor blade. Coater and
doctor blades are normally manufactured from hardened steel
strips. One common way of reducing the wear problem is to
apply an abrasion resistant coating to the steel blade
after it has been manufactured to its final geometry in the
form of a coater or doctor blade. In connection to this,
usually a nickel layer must be applied to act as a bond-
coat between the substrate and the abrasion resistant
coating.
Thus, it is known that abrasion resistant coatings can
be used, but there are difficulties to find a cost-
efficient and environmentally friendly method that can meet
the required quality. The cost for a coater or doctor blade
with an applied abrasion resistant coating is at present
very high. Moreover, the cost for a quality problem
occurring during usage in a printing industry or in a paper
mill is high. For cost reasons, a continuous roll-to-roll
coating process, preferably integrated in the production of
the steel strip, is therefore required. Further, for
quality reasons, a dense coating with very good adhesion to
the substrate is of advantage. Prom a cost perspective, it
is also a rurtner advantage xr there is such a good
adhesion of the abrasion resistant coating that there is no
need of any separate bond-coat.
The good adhesion of a dense coating is needed for the
functional quality of the finished coater or doctor blade.
A poor adhesion, or a porous or coarse coating, would cause
problems during usage of the coater blade or doctor blade,
e.g., that the coating starts to flake off, or that grains
or small pieces are torn off, or that fissure problems
occur. All in all, this is not acceptable from a quality
and cost perspective, since this type of problem with a
doctor blade would result in bad printing quality, or that
many frequent stops would be needed in the paper mill, to
replace bad coater blades. In a process industry such as a
paper mill, each stop is very costly and must be avoided.
There are several common methods of making a coating
and also several different types of coatings that are being
used. As examples can be mentioned:
¦ Ceramic coatings, often consisting of Al2O3 with possible
additions of TiO2 and/or ZrO2. This type of coating is
normally applied by using a thermal spray method and an
example of this method is described in, e.g., US-A-6 431
066, in which a ceramic coating is applied along one
edge of a doctor blade. Another example of a method is
described in EP-B-758 026, in which a wear resistant
coating is applied along one edge using several coating
steps in a rather complicated continuous process
including thermal spray. Thermal spray methods have
normally some major drawbacks. The formed coating is
rough which means that polishing or other further
processing must usually be done to the surface after the
coating. A thermal spray coating also usually includes a
high degree of porosity, implying that a thin dense
coating normally can not be achieved. Furthermore, the
thickness of thermal sprayed coatings is normally rather
high. In the case of coater and doctor blades, the
thickness of a ceramic coating is often in the range of
20-100 µm. During usage, a thick and coarse coating has
an increased risk of fissure formation or that grains
tear off from the surface. In many cases expensive
nickel or nickel alloys must also be used as a bond-coat
in order to improve the adhesion of the ceramic coating.
Metallic coatings, often consisting of pure nickel or
chromium, or in the form of a compound such as nickel-
phosphorus. These types of metallic coatings are
normally applied by using a plating method, and
especially electrolytic plating. Electrolytic plating
methods have some drawbacks, one major being the
difficulty to obtain an even thickness and also that the
adhesion of the layer can be poor. Also, plating
processes are not environmentally friendly, on the
contrary, these processes are often causing
environmental problems.
Combinations of coatings, such as a nickel coating
comprising abrasion resistant particles, e.g., SiC. One
example of this method is described in WO 02/46526, in
which different layers are applied in a continuous
process for electrolytic nickel coatings in several
steps and by adding abrasive particles to at least one
of these steps. This method also has some drawbacks, in
principle the same drawbacks as for electrolytic plating
as described above, but also that nickel is used to a
large extent as a bond-coat, meaning that the coating is
very expensive.
Thus, the methods as described in the examples above can
not be used for the present invention.
Therefore, it is a primary object of the present
invention to provide a hard and abrasion resistant coated
metal strip with improved adhesion between a dense coating
and the substrate.
A further object of the present invention is to obtain a
cost-efficient coating in a continuous roll-to-roll process
integrated in the production of a steel strip.
Yet another object of the present invention is to
provide a coated steel strip product with a dense layer of
an abrasion resistant coating, so as to enable the
manufacturing of coater and doctor blades of said material.
Still another object of the present invention is to
provide a method to manufacture a doctor or coater blade
directly in connection to a continuous coating in a roll-
to-roll process included in a strip production line,
without any need of further manufacturing steps in a
separate blade manufacturing.
A further object of the present invention is to obtain a
coating with a thickness as uniform as possible.
These and other objects have been surprisingly attained
by providing a coated steel product according to claim 1.
Further preferred embodiments are defined in the dependent
claims.
Brief Description of the Drawings
Figure 1 shows a schematic cross-section of a metal
strip according to one embodiment of the invention.
Figure 2 shows a schematic cross-section of a metal
strip according to a second embodiment of the invention.
Figure 3 shows schematically a production line for the
manufacturing of a coated metal strip material according to
the invention.
Detailed description of the invention
The final product, in the form of a hardenable strip
steel with a coating of a dense and hard abrasion resistant
coating, is suitable in doctor and coater blade
applications, such as doctor blades for rotogravure or
flexogravure printing, or coater blades for scraping paper
in the manufacturing of paper, or creping blades for use in
creping of paper in the manufacturing of paper. These are
all applications in which wear often arise on the blades,
wear originating from the contact with the rolls or wear
coming from the paper, which contains abrasive minerals. A
suitable coating has a dense layer of an abrasion resistant
coating with good adhesion, which is hard but also tough
enough to withstand the work-load and pressure during
usage, without showing any tendency to brittleness or
tearing off.
To prevent the end product from wear, it is suitable
to have the product coated with at least one layer of
abrasion resistant coating. Both one-sided and two-sided
coatings can be used. One-sided coatings is preferable from
a cost perspective and should be used whenever possible,
and especially in the doctor blade application for use in
flexogravure printing, the one-sided coating will normally
stand the lifetime needed. For blade applications used in
more severe conditions, or during longer running times,
two-sided coatings may be preferable. Otherwise, problems
may occur with, e.g., plastic deformation along the edge on
the uncoated side, or that there is a material build-up
along the edge of the uncoated side, which occasionally may
be ripped off from a spot, causing material to locally be
torn away from the edge of the coater blade.
The method described in the present invention is
suitable for thin coatings of hard and dense abrasion
resistant layers in thicknesses on each side up to 25 µm in
total, normally up to 20µm in total, preferably up to 15 µm
in total, or at the best maximum 12 µm or even maximum 10 µm
in total, is preferable from a cost perspective. If
thicker coatings are to be coated, an optimum in cost
versus properties may be achieved by using multi-layers
with up to 10 layers, and where each layer is between 0,1
to 15 µm thick, suitably between 0,1 to 10 µm, or more
suitably 0,1 to 7 µm, preferably 0,1 to 5 µm and even more
preferably 0,1 to 3 µm.
The coating is performed at a rate of minimum 2,5
meters per minute, preferably min 5 m/min, most preferably
min 10 m/min.
The coating should be sufficiently wear-resistant in
order to withstand the wear and shear exerted by the
treated material, on the other hand it should not be too
thick, due to economical reasons and fragility/brittleness.
For coater blade and doctor blade applications, the ratio
between the thickness of the coating and the substrate
material should be between 0,1% to 12%, normally 0,1 to 10%
and usually 0,1 to 7,5% but most preferably between 0,1-5%.
The abrasion resistance can be achieved by depositing
at least one layer of dense oxide coating in the form of
Al2O3, TiO2 or ZrO2. or mixtures of these oxides, preferably
Al2O3 -based. Depending on the requirements, an optimum of
required hardness and toughness can be achieved by using
mixed oxides in the coating. This can be achieved by co-
evaporation of aluminum oxide and another selected oxide.
Preferably it can be a co-evaporation of aluminum oxide and
any other oxide, preferably TiO2 and/or ZrO2. Multi-layers
may also be used in order to enable a combination of oxides
so as to optimize hardness and toughness by having up to 10
layers with different oxides in the layers.
In variation to the above-described abrasion resistant
coating consisting of essentially oxides, also other dense
and hard coatings such as metallic coatings can be used in
the present invention. Hard metallic coatings such as
essentially pure Cr may be used if a simple and cheap
coating is to be preferred in order to reduce cost as much
as possible.
Yet another variation of the present invention is to
use layers/coatings of transition metal carbides and/or
nitrides, such as e.g. TiN, TiC or CrN, also in some cases
in combination with an oxide in the form of Al2O3, TiO2 or
ZrO2, or mixtures of these oxides, preferably Al2O3 -based.
By using the multi-layer system with up to 10 layers, a
coating existing of a combination of several layers of
different oxides and nitrides can even further enhance the
optimum of desired hardness and toughness.
In order to withstand the wear and shear forces on a
coater or a doctor blade, the hardness of the thin coating
should be above 600 HV, more suitably above 700 HV,
preferably above 800 HV and most preferably above 900 HV.
The tolerances of each layer is maximum + /- 10% of
the layer thickness at strip widths up to 400 mm. This
means that very tight tolerances can be achieved, which is
of benefit for the precision during usage and the quality
of the product. In comparison to plating or thermal spray
this represents much higher tolerances. For instance, in
plating there is a so called dog-bone effect, which results
in varying thicknesses of the layer. In that case, the
layer usually varies more than +/- 50% of the layer
thickness.
There is no need of any separate bond-coat, but nickel
may still be used in one of the layers if it is required
from a technical perspective, e.g., to enhance toughness.
Since nickel is expensive it is usually used in very thin
layers only, suitably between 0 to 2 µm, preferably between
0-1 µm and most preferably between 0-0,5 µm. However, any
possible nickel layer would not be the layer adjacent to
the substrate.
Description of the substrate material to be coated
The material to be coated should have a good basic
mechanical strength, suitable for a coater or doctor blade
application. Preferably, it should be a hardenable steel in
a hardened and tempered condition, or alternatively a
precipitation hardenable steel, such as the alloy disclosed
in WO 93/07303, which in the end condition can achieve a
tensile strength level above 1200 MPa, or preferably more
than 1300 MPa, or at the best above 1400 MPa, or even 1500
MPa. If the coater or doctor blade is intended for use in a
corrosive environment, then the steel alloy should also
have a sufficient addition of chromium to enable a good
basic corrosion resistance. The Cr content should in this
case be above 10% by weight, or at least 11%, or preferably
a minimum of 12%.
The coating method may be applied on any kind of
product made of said type of steel alloy and in the form of
a strip that has good hot workability and also can be cold-
rolled to thin dimensions. The alloy should also be capable
of readily being manufactured to coater or doctor blade
applications in a manufacturing process including steps
such as forming, grinding, shaving, cutting, polishing,
stamping, or the like. The thickness of the strip substrate
material is usually between 0,015 mm to 5,0 mm and suitably
between 0,03 mm to 3 mm. Preferably, it is between 0,03 to
2 mm, and even more preferably between 0,03 to 1,5 mm. The
width of the substrate material depends on if the coating
is made before or after the slitting operation. Further,
said width should preferably be selected to be a width
suitable for further manufacturing to the final width of
the coater or doctor blade. In principle, the width of the
substrate material is therefore between 1 to 1500 mm,
suitably 1 to 1000 mm, or preferably 1 to 500 mm, or even
more preferably between 5 and 500 mm. The length of the
substrate material is suitably between 10 and 20 000 m,
preferably between 100 and 20 000 m.
Description of the Coating Method
A variety of physical or chemical vaporation
deposition methods for the application of the coating media
and the coating process may be used as long as they provide
a continuous uniform and adherent layer. As exemplary of
deposition methods can be mentioned chemical vapor
deposition (CVD), metal organic chemical vapor deposition
(MOCVD), physical vapor deposition (PVD) such as sputtering
and evaporation by resistive heating, by electron beam, by
induction, by arc resistance or by laser deposition
methods, but for the present invention especially electron
beam evaporation (EB) is preferred for the deposition.
Optionally, the EB evaporation can be plasma activated to
even further ensure good quality coatings of hard and dense
layers.
For the present invention, it is a pre-requisite that the
coating method is integrated in a roll-to-roll strip
production line. The hard coating is then deposited by
means of electron beam evaporation (EB) in a roll-to-roll
process. If multi layers are needed, the formation of them
can be achieved by integrating several EB deposition
chambers in-line. The deposition of metallic coatings
should be made under reduced atmosphere at a maximum
pressure of 1 x 10"2 mbar with no addition of any reactive
gas to ensure essentially pure metal films. The deposition
of metal oxides should be performed under reduced pressure
with an addition of an oxygen source as reactive gas in the
chamber. A partial pressure of oxygen should be in the
range 1 - 100 x 10-4 mbar. If other types of coatings are
to be achieved, e.g., transition metal carbides and/or
nitrides such as TiN, TiC or CrN, or mixtures thereof with,
e.g., metal oxides, the conditions during the coating
should be adjusted with regard to the partial pressure of a
reactive gas so as to enable the formation of the intended
compound. In the case of oxygen a reactive gas such as H2O,
O2 or O3, but preferably 02, may be used. In the case of
nitrogen a reactive gas such as N2/ NH3 or N2H4, but
preferably N2, may be used. In the case of carbon, any
carbon containing gas may be used as reactive gas, for an
example CH4, C2H2 or C2H4. All these reactive EB evaporation
processes may be plasma activated.
To enable a good adhesion, different types of cleaning
steps are used. First of all, the surface of the substrate
material should be cleaned in a proper way to remove all
oil residues, which otherwise may negatively affect the
efficiency of the coating process and the adhesion and
quality of the coating. Moreover, the very thin native
oxide layer that normally always is present on a steel
surface must be removed. This can preferably be done by
including a pre-treatment of the surface before the
deposition of the coating. In this roll-to-roll production
line, the first production step is therefore preferably an
ion assisted etching of the metallic strip surface to
achieve good adhesion of the first coating [see Fig. 3].
Description of embodiments of the invention
Two examples of embodiments of the invention will now
be described in more details. The first example {Figure 1)
comprises a coating 1,2 for a substrate material 3 in full

strip width. The substrate material can be made of
different alloys, such as a hardenable carbon steel or a
hardenable stainless chromium steel. The other example
(Figure 2) comprises a coating 4 of a steel strip 5, which
before the coating process, has been both slitted and edge
treated to a width in principle twice the final width of
the coater blade. During coating, both the main sides 7,8
and the narrow lateral sides 9,10 are coated, thereby-
obtaining a complete coating around the scraping or cutting
edges 11,12. Suitably, the lateral sides 9 and 10 are
coated simulateneously with the somewhat narrower main side
7. The examples given are only intended as illustrative
examples to the invention and may not serve as a limitation
to the present innovation.
The substrate material should have a composition
suitable for hardening, which means:
- Hardenable carbon steel of 0,1-1,5% C, 0,001-4% Cr,
0,01-1,5% Mn, 0,01-1,5% Si, up to 1% Ni, 0,001-0,5%N, rest
essentially Fe; or
- Hardenable chromium steels of 0,1-1,5% C, 10-16% Cr,
0,001-1% Ni, 0,01-1,5% Mn, 0,01-1,5% Si, up to 3% Mo,
0,001-0,5% N, rest essentially Fe; or
- Precipitation hardenable steels of: 0,001-0,3% C, 10-16%
Cr, 4-12% Ni, 0,1-1,5% Ti, 0,01-1,0% Al, 0,01-6% Mo, 0,001-
4% Cu, 0,001-0,3% N, 0,01-1,5% Mn, 0,01-1,5% Si, rest
essentially Fe.
Example 1
The chemical compositions of the substrate materials
in the example are according to the internal Sandvik
designation 20C2 and 13C26, with essentially the following
nominal composition:
Sandvik 20C2: 1,0% C, 1,4% Cr, 0,3% Si and 0,3% Mn (by
weight)/ and

Sandvik 13C26: 0,7% C, 13% Cr, 0,4% Si and 0,7% Mn (by
weight).
Firstly, the substrate materials are produced by
ordinary metallurgical steelmaking to a chemical
composition as described above. After this, they are hot-
rolled down to an intermediate size, and thereafter cold-
rolled in several steps with a number of recrystallization
steps between said rolling steps, until a final thickness
of 0,2 mm and a width of maximally 400 mm. Thereafter the
strip steels are hardened and tempered to the required
mechanical strength level, which according to the present
invention should be at least 1200 MPa. The surface of the
substrate material is then cleaned in a proper way to
remove oil residuals from the rolling and hardening
operations. Thereafter, the coating process takes place in
a continuous process line, starting with decoiling
equipment. The first step in the roll-to-roll process line
can be a vacuum chamber or an entrance vacuum lock followed
by an etch chamber, in which ion assisted etching takes
place in order to remove the thin oxide layer on the
substrate material. The strip then enters into the EB
evaporation chamber(s) in which deposition of an oxide
takes place, in this example Al2O3 is selected as the
material to be deposited. An oxide layer of normally 0,1 up
to 25 µm is deposited; the preferred thickness depends on
the application. In the examples described here, a
thickness of 2 µm is deposited by using one EB evaporation
chamber. After the EB evaporation, the coated strip
material passes through the exit vacuum chamber or exit
vacuum lock before it is being coiled on to a coiler. The
coated strip material can now, if needed, be further
processed by for an example slitting and edge treatment, to
obtain the preferred final dimension and edge condition for
the manufacturing of a coater blade. It is an advantage if

an additional coating along the edge of the finished coater
blade application can be made in a continuous coating
process using EB evaporation, but also other processes may-
be used. Preferably, an additional coating along the edge
of a finished blade is of same type as the coating applied
on the strip material according to the present invention.
The end product as described in this examples, i.e. a
coated 20C2 and 13C26-strip material respectively, in a
strip thickness of 0,2 mm and with a thin coating of Al2O3
of 2 µm, has a very good adhesion of the coated layer and
is thus suitable to use especially for the manufacturing of
doctor blades for flexogravure or rotogravure printing.
The roll-to-roll electron beam evaporation process
referred to above is illustrated in Figure 3. The first
part of such a production line is the uncoiler 13 within a
vacuum chamber 14, then the in-line ion assisted etching
chamber 15, followed by a series of EB evaporation chambers
16, the number of EB evaporation chambers needed can vary
from 1 up to 10 chambers, this to achieve a multi-layered
structure, if so desired. All the EB evaporation chambers
16 are equipped with EB guns 17 and water-cooled copper
crucibles 18 for the evaporation. After these chambers
comes the exit vacuum chamber 19 and the recoiler 20 for
the coated strip material, the recoiler being located
within vacuum chamber 19. The vacuum chambers 14 and 19 may
also be replaced by an entrance vacuum lock system and an
exit vacuum lock system, respectively. In the latter case,
the uncoiler 13 and the coiler 20 are placed in the open
air.

Example 2
The chemical composition of the substrate material in this
example is according to the internal Sandvik designation
20C with essentially the following nominal composition:
Sandvik 20C: 1,0% C, 0,2% Cr, 0,3% Si and 0,4% Mn (by-
weight) .
Firstly, the substrate material is produced by
ordinary metallurgical steelmaking to a chemical
composition as described above. The material is then hot-
rolled down to an intermediate size, and thereafter cold-
rolled in several steps with a number of recrystallization
steps between said rolling steps, until a final thickness
of 0,45 mm and a width of maximum 400 mm are attained.
Thereafter, the steel strip is hardened and tempered to the
required mechanical strength level, according to the
present invention above 1200 MPa. The strip is afterwards
slitted to a width corresponding to substantially twice the
width of the final blade application. According to this
example, the final coater blade width is 100 mm and the
strip is thus slitted to a width of between 200-250 mm.
The edges along the slitted strip are then edge-treated,
for example shaved, ground and polished, to the conditions
and geometry considered suitable for the intended coater
blade application. After this, the strip is submitted to a
coating treatment fully analogous to Example 1, cf. also
Figure 3. The end product will be a coated strip according
to Figure 2, the coating material and thickness being the
same as in Example 1. Now, the coated strip material can be
slitted in the middle along section 6 to obtain two coated
strips, each with the dimension and edge geometry suitable
for a finished coater blade. In principle, only cutting
into required final length remains.
The end product as described in this example, i.e. a
slitted, edge treated and coated strip material, in a strip
thickness of 0,45 mm and a final slitted width of 100 mm,

has a thin covering aluminum oxide coating of 2 µm with a
very good adhesion of the coated layer. This product can be
cut into required length, normally in between 3-10 m, and
then used as a coater blade in a paper mill, without any
further processing. It may also, if required, be further
processed, e.g., with an additional edge treatment or with
additional coatings along the edge, or polishing or the
like, in order to meet a specific customer demand., An
additional coating along the edge of the finished coater
blade application, can preferably be made in a continuous
coating process using EB evaporation, but also other
processes may be used.

WE CLAIM
1. A coated steel strip product with a dense and hard abrasion resistant coating applied
directly on to the steel strip surface on one side or both sides of said strip characterized
in that said steel strip product is manufactured by etching and coating in a continuous
roll to roll process including an etch chamber and an electron beam-evaporation
chamber, the thickness of said coating is in total maximally 25pm, the hardness of said
coating is at least 600 HV and the tensile strength of the steel strip substrate is as least
1200 MPa
2. The product according to claim 1, wherein the thickness of the strip substrate is between
0.015 and 5.0 mm
3. The product according to claim lor 2, wherein the steel strip substrate is made of
hardenable carbon steel or hardenable stainless chromium steel or precipitation
hardenable strip steel.
4. The product according to any of claims 1 - 3, wherein the coating is substantially made
of AI203
5. The product according to any of claims 1-3, wherein the coating is a mixture of AI2O3
and TiO2 and/or ZrO2 the main ingredient being AI2O3
6. The product according to any of claims 1-3, wherein the coating is a metallic coating
containing essentially Cr.
7. The product according to any of claims 1-3, wherein the coating is a coating of transition
metal carbides or transition metal nitrides, preferably TiN, TiC or CrN or mixtures thereof.
8. The product according to any of the preceding claims, wherein the coating has a multi-
layer constitution of up to 10 layers.
9.The product according to claim 8, wherein each individual layer has a thickness of
between 0.1 to 15um.
10. The product according to claim 9, wherein the coating has a multi-layer constitution of
individual layers of different coatings of oxides in the form of AI2O3, TiO2 or ZrO2, or
mixture thereof, and if desired also in combination with layers of nitrides or carbides
such as TiN, TiC and also optionally, a coating such as Cr.
11. The product according to claim 10, wherein there is also at least one layer of nickel in
thickness up to 2um, this nickel layer not being adjacent the strip surface.
12. A doctor or coater blade which is suitable for e.g. the paper and printing industry,
comprising a coated steel strip product according to any of claims 11.
13. A doctor or coater blade according to claim 12, wherein its lateral scraping and/or cutting
side is also coated with the same coating composition as the main sides.
The present invention relates to a coated steel strip product
with a dense and hard abrasion resistant coating on one side
or both sides of said strip. The thickness of said coating is
in total maximally 25 µm, the hardness of said coating is at
least 600 HV and the tensile strength of the steel strip
substrate is at least 1200 MPa. The coating is preferably
applied by electron beam evaporation and the coating may be,
e.g., of Al2O3. The coated metal strip is useful for the
manufacturing of doctor and coater blades for paper and
printing industry.

Documents:

00067-kolnp-2006-abstract.pdf

00067-kolnp-2006-description complete.pdf

00067-kolnp-2006-drawings.pdf

00067-kolnp-2006-form 1.pdf

00067-kolnp-2006-form 2.pdf

00067-kolnp-2006-form 3.pdf

00067-kolnp-2006-form 5.pdf

00067-kolnp-2006-international publication.pdf

00067-kolnp-2006-others.pdf

abstract-00067-kolnp-2006.jpg


Patent Number 224441
Indian Patent Application Number 00067/KOLNP/2006
PG Journal Number 42/2008
Publication Date 17-Oct-2008
Grant Date 14-Oct-2008
Date of Filing 06-Jan-2006
Name of Patentee SANDVIK INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AB
Applicant Address S-811 81 SANDVIKEN
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 HULTIN STIGENBERG, ANNA STJÄRNGATAN 9, S-811 52 SANDVIKEN
2 SCHUISKY, MIKAEL MOSSVÄGEN 75C, S-811 34 SANDVIKEN
PCT International Classification Number C23C 14/06
PCT International Application Number PCT/SE2004/001171
PCT International Filing date 2004-08-09
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 0302207-6 2003-08-12 Sweden