INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTIVITY/MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY
ORIGINATING TECHNOLOGY/ NASA CONTRIBUTION
To enable low-cost space access for advanced exploration
vehicles, researchers from NASA’s Ames Research
Center invented and patented a protective coating
for ceramic materials (PCCM) in 1994. The technology,
originally intended to coat the heat shields
of the X-33 and X-34 next-generation vehicles
for optimum protection during atmospheric reentry,
greatly reduces surface temperature of a thermal
control structure while it reradiates absorbed
energy to a cooler surface or body, thus preventing
degradation of the underlying ceramic material.
PARTNERSHIP
NASA Ames developed PCCM for use on ceramic fibers,
but ongoing tests at the Center concluded that
the coating could be effective on many other materials.
As a result, Ames opted to align with a commercial
partner to bring the protective coating technology
to industry for thermal and fire protection. Wessex
Incorporated, of Blacksburg, Virginia, obtained
a partially exclusive license for PCCM in 1996,
followed by an expanded exclusive license in 2001
for all fields other than space applications. Wessex
initially applied the protective coating to building
materials, specifically wood and steel for firewall
applications. Through further testing and experimentation,
however, the company would eventually come to learn
the true potential of PCCM, leading to longer-lasting
materials, greater energy conservation and fuel
efficiency, increased productivity, and significantly
reduced operating costs for numerous U.S. businesses.
PRODUCT OUTCOME
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| Emisshield™ absorbs energy and reradiates it over a great range of temperatures, providing maximum protection for surfaces and underlying materials. |
Known commercially as Emisshield,™ Wessex’s PCCM
product mirrors NASA’s original PCCM coating in
that it provides increased “hemispherical” emissivity—the
ability to absorb energy and reradiate it to a
cooler surface, body, or atmosphere. The Ames scientists
who invented PCCM determined the emissivity of
the coating to be between 0.8 and 0.9, making it
a “grey body.” This means that the ratio of energy
absorbed is not exactly the same as the amount
of energy reradiated (a substrate that absorbs
all energy regardless of the direction or wavelength
of the energy and is a perfect radiator of the
same energy is considered a “black body,” but to
date, no such substrate exists, so a grey body
is known to have the highest emissivity). Many
substrates can have high emissivity values at ambient
or lower temperatures, but as the temperature climbs,
the emissivity of these non-grey body materials
can decrease rapidly. Since PCCM was developed
to withstand the extreme conditions of reentry,
which involve going from -250 °F to almost 3,000
°F in a matter of seconds, the emissivity agents
in the coating and in its commercial descendant
maintain their
grey body capabilities at temperatures exceeding
3,000 °F. In other words, PCCM and Emisshield will
continue to absorb and reradiate at the same ratio,
over a great range of temperatures.
Like PCCM, Emisshield can be reused and repeatedly
cycled between severe extremes of subzero temperatures
and temperatures over 3,000 °F, without ever damaging
the protective coating or the underlying material.
With each use, the coating’s molecular structure
is rearranged to create a stronger bond between
the coating and the underlying material, and an
even greater level of thermal protection. In essence,
the protective coating actually improves over time.
Wessex has embraced a high rate of success with
Emisshield beyond its initial accomplishments in
fireproofing building materials. In automotives,
Modern Materials Incorporated, of Rochester, Indiana,
is using Emisshield’s AR-1 blend to coat racecars
and automotive parts. The coating was recently
applied to the driver’s compartment of a racecar
to lower floor pan temperatures that regularly
range from 740 °F to 760 °F. By absorbing most
of the heat and redirecting it away from the floor
of the driver’s compartment, Emisshield AR-1 cooled
down the floor pan temperature to 370 °F—almost
50 percent cooler than an untreated floor pan.
Separately, Emisshield was applied to the header
pipes and collectors of a 1,400-horsepower, 800-cubic
inch V-8 pro-stock dragster. Before the coating,
the engine was tested by a dynometer for background
performance. After the initial performance readings,
the engine’s header pipes and collectors were removed,
grit-blasted, and coated with Emisshield on the
outside only. The coating was allowed to dry for
1 hour before testing resumed on the engine in
the same manner as before the coating was applied.
Results from the follow-up test showed that Emisshield
was able to increase horsepower by 15, decrease
the pounds of fuel used by 26 pounds per hour to
yield the higher horsepower, and reduce the outer
surface temperature of the header pipes and collectors
by 550 °F. These results will not only impact drag
racers but other types of race engines, along with
the engines that are put into everyday street cars.
While the demand for Emisshield in various fields
remains steady, Wessex is concentrating on three
key areas: petrochemical production, metal heat
treating, and general refractory applications such
as boilers and heat exchangers. The company has
discovered that the coating, when applied to refractories
or the tubes in boilers, can help increase the
efficiency of a process by requiring less fuel
to yield the same amount of product.
To demonstrate this boost in efficiency, Wessex
teamed with Virginia Carolina Refractory, of Denver,
North Carolina, to apply Emisshield to the afterburner
of a batch kiln that cures catalytic converter
elements. The purpose of the afterburner is to
heat the exhaust gasses during the kiln cycle to
completely burn the organic binders that are discharged
from the catalytic converter elements. In the kiln’s
total cycle of 48 hours, 25 percent of the total
fuel usage is consumed by the 80-foot-long, 6-foot-tall
afterburner to ramp up and maintain a temperature
of 1,400 °F. Virginia Carolina Refractory wanted
to see a decrease in fuel use and a shorter ramp-up
time to reach 1,400 °F.
It took 15 gallons of the Emisshield ST-2 product
to coat the entire afterburner, using a spray gun.
In 3 months, the natural gas burners that are controlled
by thermocouples hanging in the afterburner were
able to be kept open at a rate between 25 percent
and 29 percent, after previously being kept open
at a rate setting of 35 percent. By reradiating
energy back into the afterburner with Emisshield,
the fuel needed to keep the afterburner at 1,400
°F could be reduced, ultimately shortening the
ramp-up time. This translated into energy savings
of approximately 23 percent in the afterburner
chamber for an entire year, or a savings of $360,000
per year for owners of this batch kiln.
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| Samples are sprayed with Emisshield ST-1 in Wessex Incorporated’s laboratory. |
Emisshield also proved to be the coating of choice
in tempering a heat treating furnace. In testing
the impact of this application, a company from
Tulsa, Oklahoma, coated the interior of a 1,200-pound
loaded furnace with Emisshield and left an identical
loaded furnace uncoated. Temperature readings taken
from both furnaces revealed that the Emisshield-coated
furnace took 1 hour less than the uncoated furnace
to reach the prime operating temperature of 1,350
°F. This 30-percent decrease in total time-to-temperature
represents an increase in production for operators.
The coated furnace also cooled down faster than
the uncoated model, reaching 600 °F in only 13
minutes, compared to 20 minutes.
To improve sales and distribution of Emisshield
products, Wessex has united with Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania-based
Harbison-Walker Refractories LTD, and Houston,
Texas-based Thorpe Corporation to promote the coating
in North America for a variety of industrial applications.
In June 2003, Emisshield was honored by NASA as
a “Turning Goals into Reality” commercial technology
award recipient. This award was presented in recognition
of accomplishments deemed the most outstanding
contributions toward each of NASA’s Enterprise
goals and objectives.
Wessex and Ames continue to work together on a
regular basis and have recently discussed the potential
use of Emisshield for some of NASA’s thermal applications.
Ames has received samples of the Wessex coatings
for evaluation of their compatibility with research
projects currently underway.
Emisshield™ is a trademark of Wessex Incorporated.



