Historical Articles
November, 1953 issue of Plating
Thickness of Electrodeposited Coatings
by the Anodic Solution Method
Presented at the 40th Annual
Convention of the American Electroplaters’ Society,
June 17, 1953.
C.F. Waite, King-Seeley Corporation,
Ann Arbor, Michigan
INTRODUCTION
With the advent of federal
restrictions curtailing the use of nickel for decorative plating came the
problem of substitute plating and the attendant
thickness
measurement problem. As decorative plating at the author’s company
was entirely interior hardware, plating chromium directly over copper sufficed
to solve the first problem.
The thickness measurement problem came when a customer complained of insufficient
chromium on plated parts. After experimentation, it was decided that the
hydrochloric
acid drop test was not dependable for the measurement of chromium plating
thickness upon copper. This left an urgent need of an accurate method of
measuring chromium
thickness. In investigating possible methods, the modification of the anodic
solution procedure of measuring plating thicknesses developed by Dr. H.
F. Francis of the Armour Institute was discovered1. After demonstrating
through
repeated
tests, the accuracy of this method with an experimental test model, it
was found that one equipment supplier was manufacturing a production instrument
(Electronic
thickness tester, Kocour Company, Chicago, Ill.) which offered advantages
in speed and versatility over the experimental model mentioned above. That
instrument
was purchased and has been used with excellent success in the routine measurement
of the thickness of chromium plated upon copper. Its use has been extended
to other plated coatings as well.
Difficulties with the conventional
tests for chromium thickness will be described first in this report. Then
details will
be given on the application of the Francis
modification of the anodic solution method for measurement of chromium over
copper, and the later use of the commercial instrument for this purpose.
Finally, there
will be discussed the use of that instrument for other combinations of plated
and base metals.
DISCUSSION
Hydrochloric Acid Drop Test
When the customer’s complaint of inadequate chromium thickness on some
of the plated parts occurred shortly after the change to a chromium plate directly
upon copper, determinations of the thickness of the chromium plate were being
made by conventional methods. For the measurement of the thickness of chromium
plated upon nickel, the author’s company had always used the hydrochloric
acid test described in the literature2. When this method was applied to chromium
plated over copper very erratic results were obtained. Various methods of
cleaning the sample were tried, but still the results were not reproducible.
In an effort
to prove or disprove the validity of the method, a number of 3 x 6 inch panels
were plated. Half of them were copper plated and then chromium plated, and
the other half were copper plated, nickel plated and then chromium plated.
They were
all chromium plated at the same time with the same current density. To avoid
edge effect, a 2 x 3 inch portion was machined from the center of each panel.
The chromium thickness on several of these 2 x 3 inch panels was measured
by weighing the panels before and after stripping the chromium with hydrochloric
acid. A quantitative analysis for chromium of the strippings of each panel
proved that the weight method was reliable and that only chromium was stripped
by the
hydrochloric acid. This method of weighing a sample before and after stripping
the chromium from a measured area with hydrochloric acid has been used from
that time as an umpire method of measuring the thickness of plated chromium.
Trials
were made using the hydrochloric acid drop test to measure the chromium thickness
on the remaining 2 x 3 inch panels. The panels with a nickel layer gave readings
that were reproducible and were within ten per cent of the results obtained
by the loss in weight method. The panels that had chromium plated directly
on copper
did not give reproducible readings. The tests indicated chromium thicknesses
from 8 to 35 millionths of an inch on immediately adjacent areas of the panels.
Thus it was decided to abandon the hydrochloric acid test as a means of determining
the thickness of chromium plated directly on copper and to search for a more
accurate test.
Anodic Solution Method
An immediate inquiry was launched to discover a satisfactory test for measuring
chromium thickness. Superficial investigation was enough to eliminate most
standard test procedures. The magnetic method was not applicable and the
thinness of the
chromium prevented the use of the microscopic method or the chord method.
An article in the May, 1948 issue of the ”Journal of the Electrochemical
Society”,
however, described a method which seemed to have possibilities. This article,
entitled ”An Electrolytic Thickness Tester for Plated Coatings”,
was written by Howard F. Francis of the Armour Research Foundation.
The method
discussed in this article was a development of the coulometric method.
Faraday’s
Law states that, ”the quantity of any element (or radical)
liberated at either anode or cathode during electrolysis is proportional
to the quantity of electricity that passes through the solution”. If
there is 100 per cent current efficiency, it is therefore possible to calculate
the
weight
of any metal which will be plated or deplated by a particular amount of electricity.
The weight of metal is a function of its density, thickness, and area, and
the amount of electricity is a function of the current and time during which
it flows.
Since the density is known, therefore, the time required to deplate a known
area with a known constant current is a direct measure of the plating thickness.
This ”anodic
solution method”, therefore, provides an absolute measurement which
does not depend upon an empirical calibration.
Its accuracy depends upon careful
measurement of the variables noted above. An empirical calibration may be
determined from standards of known plate thickness
to avoid error introduction by a faulty measurement of the areas. The time
necessary
to deplate at constant current the known area is the variable in measuring
thickness, and so it must be checked carefully. A change in voltage is used
as an indication
that the plated metal is entirely deplated from the base metal. An electrolyte
must be selected such that the plated metal will dissolve anodically more
readily than the base metal or, in other words, for such an electrolyte the
plated
metal is higher in electrochemical activity than the base metal.
Dr. Francis
used a small current to insure 100 per cent current efficiency
and this was held constant. He made use of a stainless steel cell and a rubber
washer
to limit the area to a known value. An ingenious system was used to record
the tine necessary to deplate the metal in question from the known area.
An electric
timer was started when a test began. A vacuum tube relay was actuated by
the voltage change at the anode when the plated metal was completely deplated
from
the known area. This relay stopped the electric timer and automatically recorded
the time necessary to deplate the plated metal.
Experimental Cell Design
In order to investigate this method an experimental cell was designed and
made. This cell is pictured in Fig. 1. The stainless steel cylinder
is pressed into
the Lucite cylinder. The rubber washer fits snugly without deformation into
the recessed portion of the Lucite. The rubber washer insulates the cathode,
the
stainless steel cathode cylinder from the metal to be checked which is the
anode; and also defines the area to be stripped. It is therefore important
that the
area of the hole be measured as accurately as possible and this is the only
critical dimension of the cell. The washer used was placed on a comparator
and blown up
to fifty diameters to enable a more accurate measurement of the area. Current
was furnished by a 90 volt dry cell; with a large variable resistance in
series with the deplating cell. A high voltage dry cell was used so
that variations
of the current caused by variations of the voltage at the deplating cell,
would be kept as small as possible. The emf of the deplating cell and
the time were
recorded on a recording potentiometer (Brown Instrument Co., Division, Minneapolis-Honeywell
Regulator Co.). A 10 per cent solution of sodium hydroxide was used as the
electrolyte.
Test Procedure
To determine the accuracy of the
experimental instrument chromium thickness standards were prepared. Several
3 x 6 inch panels were plated as
described
previously
and 2 x 3 inch panels were machined from them. The loss in weight method
was used on a number of these to determine the thickness of the chromium.
The panels
selected for this were carefully weighed and then painted on the back and
edges with acid proof paint. Then they were immersed in hydrochloric acid
until the
chromium was stripped. After rinsing and drying the acid proof paint was
removed with thinner and after careful drying the panels were reweighed.
The thickness
of the chromium was assumed to be the same over the entire six square inches.
The chromium thicknesses thus determined were assumed to be the same as those
of the other panels plated with the same current density and at the same
time.
Thickness
determinations with the deplating cell the were made on these corresponding
panels using a current of 2 milliamperes in the cell. The potentiometer trace
on its record automatically plotted the emf of the deplating cell against
time. Time, as a variable, was read directly from the potentiometer record.
The start
of the deplating was recorded by the beginning of the trace as the deplating
current was turned on. While deplating, the emf of the cell was nearly constant,
but at the moment the deplating was complete, the emf rose sharply. Thus
the time elapsed while deplating was in progress was read directly from the
potentiometer
record. Each calibration panel was checked several times. From the thickness
determined by the loss of weight test, it was then possible to calculate
the thickness of plate removed per unit of time. The calibration of the deplating
unit with one particular rubber washer was 2.05 millionths of an inch of
chromium
for each minute of deplating time with a current of two milliamperes. This
value agreed within 1 per cent of the value calculated from the equivalent
weight,
density, area, current, and time. The reproducibility of readings in the
range of 8 to 20 millionths of chromium was within 5 per cent. The variation
between
these readings and the thickness by the loss of weight method for those panels
was less than 5 per cent.
To determine if a smaller current
was being used than was necessary, experimental runs were made using a current
of 5 milliamperes
and 2 milliamperes. A current
of 5 milliamperes gave results which were not always reproducible, and usually
were slightly high. This was attributed to the fact that the current efficiency
was not 100 per cent at 5 milliamperes, It was found experimentally that
a current of 22 milliamperes could be used. However, it was decided to use
2
milliamperes
in production to be assured of 100 per cent current efficiency.
The anodic solution
or coulometric method was adopted immediately by the inspection section for
the routine checking of chromium plating thicknesses on production
parts. It was found to be very accurate and satisfactory for this purpose.
Shortly after the adoption of this anodic solution method to measure the
thickness of
chromium electrodeposits, announcements of a commercial instrument were noted.
Thickness comparison tests were made using the two instruments and the results
were found to be comparable.
Commercial Thickness Tester
The commercial thickness tester has a deplating cell similar to the experimental
unit. It is made of stainless steel and uses a rubber washer to limit the
deplating area. An electronic relay is used in conjunction with an
automatic counter
to measure the time of deplating. When the deplating current is turned on,
the counter
is automatically started. When the plated metal is deplated, the rate of
change of voltage actuates the relay which turns off the instrument
including the
counter. The counter is calibrated directly in thickness units (millionths
of an inch
for chromium and hundred thousandths of an inch for other metals). The electrolyte
is agitated during deplating by the ingenious use of pulsating air which
is the secret of its greater speed, as will be explained presently.
The thickness
of
several plated metals can be measured by adjusting a dial on the instrument’s
front panel to the appropriate reading and then using the appropriate electrolyte
supplied.
The commercial unit was
found to have the advantage of speed—about
thirty times faster—over the experimental one. In production, the author’s
company tries to hold the thickness of decorative chromium plate between
10 and 20 millionths of an inch. With the experimental unit it took approximately
eight
minutes plus set-up time to measure 16 millionths of an inch of chromium.
The
commercial tester was found to deplate about one millionth of an inch of
chromium or about one hundred-thousandth of an inch of another metal per
second. This
is because the air agitation allows 100 per cent current efficiency at a
higher current density. The author feels the commercial instrument is much
more versatile
than the experimental unit since it is designed to measure, by the use of
appropriately furnished electrolytes, the thickness of chromium, silver,
tin, cadmium, zinc,
brass, copper, and nickel on steel; the thickness of chromium, silver, tin,
cadmium, zinc, and nickel on brass or copper, and the thickness of chromium
on nickel.
Composite coatings, such as copper, nickel and chromium on steel, may be
measured successively by changing the electrolyte solution without disengaging
the cell
from the sample.
Production Experience
It has been used successfully for about a year to measure the thickness
of nickel and chromium on copper and chromium on nickel. For these
measurements
the anodic
solution method is preferred over all others. The instrument has been used
also to determine the thickness of cadmium, zinc and copper upon steel. It
is believed
to be more accurate than a magnetic type instrument* for these determinations;
however, the latter is preferred because it does not damage the parts. The
thickness of copper upon zinc die cast metal can not be determined by the
anodic solution
method because as far as is known, no electrolyte has been discovered in
which copper will dissolve anodically more readily than zinc.
The
thickness of nickel deposits over steel has been found by many to be difficult
to evaluate by
the anodic solution method. As this was a problem the author’s
company might shortly be facing, the thickness of nickel plated upon steel
was checked by this method. Results were found to be erratic. The rate of
change of voltage after the nickel was deplated from the steel was not great
enough
to actuate the relay and turn off the instrument even though the electrolyte
was such that the nickel dissolved anodically more readily than the steel
upon which it is plated. The results indicated that the nickel thickness
could be
measured if it were plated upon copper, but not if it were plated upon steel.
To prove or disprove this point, another set of experimental panels were
plated. These panels were cold rolled steel and were 4 x 5 inches. They were
numbered
in opposite corners as shown in Fig. 2. Twelve panels were copper plated
and twelve were unplated steel. All 24 panels were placed in the nickel tank
and
plated at 50 asf. At the end of one minute, 3 of the copper plated and 3
of the
unplated steel panels were removed. At the end of 4, 20, and 60 minutes,
this procedure was repeated. Thus, there were produced 3 copper plated steel
panels;
3 steel panels plated with 1 minute of nickel; 3 of each with 4 minutes of
nickel; 3 of each with 20 minutes of nickel; and 3 of each with 60 minutes
of nickel.
Two samples of each type were selected and cut in half as is shown by the
dotted line in Fig. 2. A piece about 1 x 2 inch was cut from one half of
each sample
as illustrated in Fig. 2. These small pieces were mounted in bakelite, polished,
and the nickel thickness was measured microscopically. The nickel thicknesses
did not vary with the base metal and are tabulated in Table 1. These values
were considered to be the same as the nickel thickness of the adjacent edges
of the
corresponding samples. The nickel thicknesses in these areas were then measured
with the commercial anodic solution type measuring instrument. The thicknesses
of nickel plated upon copper are shown in the above table. The amount of
nickel on the one minute panel is
not shown because it was below the minimum limit of accuracy of the instrument,
which is 50
millionths of an inch
for all metals except
chromium and 5 millionths of an inch for chromium. The percentage of error
of these values
compared to those determined by the microscopic method is also tabulated.
The range of values for each panel was about equal to the error. The thicknesses
of nickel plated upon steel could not be determined on the commercial anodic
solution tester with the electrolyte available during the test period noted
above.
One possible reason for this difficulty
was that the rate of change of voltage across the cell when deplating was
complete was insufficient to actuate
the relay
of the instrument. To confirm this, a recording potentiometer was placed
in the circuit to record any change in voltage and the time at which the
change
in voltage
occurred. This indicated a small change in voltage and also provided a positive
measure of the time which did not depend upon the rate of change and satisfactory
results were obtained. Passivity was also considered to be a cause of faulty
readings in the determination of nickel thickness on any base metal. Any
electroplater can testify to the difficulty of preventing nickel plate from
becoming passive.
If this occurs during deplating, it will give the nickel an apparent thickness
greater than it actually is because the current efficiency at the anode is
not 100 per cent.
The difficulty experienced with nickel thickness determinations over steel
was reported to the supplier who in turn, furnished a sample of a new electrolyte
for future trials. Experiments with the nickel plated panels were repeated
using
the new electrolyte and were wholly successful. With it, it was possible
to measure the thickness of nickel plated on either steel or copper within
five
per cent.
CONCLUSION
In summation, it has been found that the anodic solution method can be
used successfully to measure the thickness of electrodeposited coatings
of copper, zinc, cadmium
and nickel upon steel, the thickness of chromium and nickel upon copper and
the thickness of chromium upon nickel. For the determination of nickel
upon steel,
chromium and nickel upon copper, and chromium upon nickel, the author prefers
to use the anodic solution method for accuracy and convenience over the drop
test or magnetic methods. For the determination of cadmium, zinc, and copper
upon steel, the magnetic method is preferred because it does not damage the
parts. At present, the author knows of no electrolyte by which the
thickness of copper
plated upon zinc die castings can be determined using the anodic solution
method. In general, the thickness of any metal plated upon any other
metal can be found
by this method if an electrolyte is obtainable in which (1) the first metal
will dissolve anodically more readily -than the second, or (2) the
metals exhibit
different potentials.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
The author wishes to acknowledge the helpful assistance of Dr. E. A. Hodges
of the Kocour Company; the co-operation of many of the personnel of that
organization and of his own company, the King-Seeley Corporation, for
their contributions
to this paper.
REFERENCES
1. Howard F. Francis, J. Electrochem Soc., 9.o (May, 1948).
2. Plating and Finislling Guidebook, 20th Editioil, Metal Industry Publishing
Co., N. Y. (1959).
DISCUSSION
MR. H.C. SCHLAUPITZ (R. Wallace & Son, Wallingford, Conn.): In
the figures that you presented on the board, you have compared the thickness
determined
by the Kocour thickness tester with microscopic thickness measurements. Your
greatest
differences are in the low thickness range. I think Dr. Read has determined
in his research work at Penn State, and we have also found it to be the case
at,
R. Wallace, that the microscopic method is the least reliable in those ranges.
Perhaps it might be that the anodic solution method is the more accurate one
and that the error given represents that of the microscopic measurement rather
than that of the anodic solution measurement.
MR. WAITE: That could be true,
though I know of no easy way to prove it. One of the big difficulties in
that range is that any errors that may take place,
which are more or less constant through a series of measurements, will have
much more bearing, percent wise. That is they cause a larger per cent error
in the
measurement of a thin plate than in the measurement of a thick one.
There is
an auxiliary unit which can be used with the Kocour unit which will allow
you to measure to 0.000005 inch on coatings other than chromium and,
I believe, to about 0.000001 inch on chromium.
MR. A. W. CAGLE (Western Electric
Company, Winston-Salem, N. C.): Has erratic
performance been experienced with the Kocour testing of tin on copper?
MR. WAITE:
I have never checked tin over copper. Supposedly it can be used as such.
I don’t know whether Mr. Hodges is in the audience or not—I
think he can answer that.
MR. A. E. HODGES (Kocour Company,
Chicago, Ill.): There should be no erratic results in testing tin over copper
with the anodic
solution method, providing
the surface oxide film is removed. This can be accomplished by rubbing the
surface lightly with a pencil eraser.
MR. WILLIAM H. FORDNEY (Hamilton
Watch Company, Lancaster, Pa.): Are the results
of microscopically made thickness measurements an average of several observations
or of one point on the specimen?
MR. WAITE: BY several, as I showed
you by the slide—we cut a piece, 2
inch x 1 inch, out of the center at that edge. The Kocour readings, of course,
were
taken directly opposite. We mounted the 1 inch portion in Bakelite. We had
to bend it in the middle so we took no measurements exactly at the bend, but
we
took the average of measurements on both sides of that throughout the entire
piece.
MR. DAMON C. ANTEL (Westinghouse
Electric Corporation, East Pittsburgh, Pa.): Has any work been done, to your
knowledge, in checking the thickness
of plated
coatings on aluminum by this method?, If so, what do you find the accuracy,
and what particular coatings have been checked?
MR. WAITE: Mr. Hodges may be
able to answer this better than I can. I know
of no way of doing such from personal experience. I think it would be extremely
difficult to find a solution in which metals ordinarily plated upon aluminum
are anodically more active than the aluminum itself.
MR. HODGES: Actually, such
tests have been made, including nickel over aluminum
and chromium over aluminum. We have not made any accuracy checks on the method,
but the end points’ (voltage changes) lead us to suspect the accuracy
would be very good.
MR. LIONEL CINAMON (Special Chemicals
Corporation, New York, N. Y.): I notice in your column that you have a differential
about 0.000010
inch consistently
down the line. Does that hold true of all of the various times put in? If
so, is there any reconciliation between the instrument and thickness along
the
0.000010 inch line? Do you, therefore, in that manner get an instrument calibration?
MR.
WAITE: I have not noticed that before, so I cannot answer your question.
MR.
CINAMON: If we assume that the instrument is correct and you have 0.000100
inch with a four minute plate, both the 20 minute plate and one hour plate
become very consistent as far as accuracy is concerned. This is because if
you take
15 times the four minute plate, you have about 0.00150 inch. Do the same
thing on the 20 minute plate and you obtain equivalent results. It would
make the
instrument fantastically accurate.
MR. WAITE: The instrument is capable
of extreme accuracy; it is only a question
of how closely you can measure the variables. The washer that we used with
the Kocour instrument, we blew up to 50 diameters and when our precision
gage department
drew a circle corresponding to it, we could find no error in the area-’ from
being out of round. The current must be held; constant. This is probably a
source of error. The density and electrochemical equivalent are exceedingly
accurate,
so inherently it is possible to make extremely accurate measurements with the
instrument.
The reading of four minutes is done
microscopically. We feel that one hundred millionths (0.000100)’ is about as low as it is accurate
to go with the measurement of any thickness with the microscope. We feel that
the error is
too great if microscopic measurement of thicknesses under 0.000100 inch is
attempted.
MR. FRANCIS T. EDDY (Chase Brass & Copper Co., Waterbury, Conn.):
In checking chromium on nickel, what is the reproducibility of results by the
electrolytic
method as compared with the hydrochloric acid spot test?
MR. WAITE: The results
are very reproducible. They consistently have been less than 5 per cent.
We found that the hydrochloric acid drop test gave us results
closer to 10 per cent accuracy even with an experienced operator because
small variations of temperature or error in timing with a stop watch can
affect it
materially. On the other hand, both the reproducibility and the accuracy
are within 5 per cent with the anodic solution method.
MR. EDDY: Ordinarily, how
long does it take to run off a test like that?
MR.
WAITE: It takes about a second with the Kocour unit.
MR. EDDY: Including
preparation time?
MR. WAITE: Practically none at all.
It is used routinely in inspection by inexperienced operators who simply
run through
their operations mechanically.
MR. EDDY: IS
it necessary to clamp the sample to the testing apparatus?
MR.
WAITE: We do, yes. The Kocour instrument has an arrangement that makes it
very easy. In the original we had the cell built right into the clamp. I
have
a sample of our original cell and some of the samples for you to see.
MR. EDDY:
We use a ring of wax around the chromium and’ apply a drop
of hydrochloric acid. ‘ We check the temperature very carefully and the
time with a stop watch. We reproduce results within 5 per cent readily and
rapidly,
so that we use quality control methods all the way through on all production.
There
is absolutely no time lost as far as setting up the sample is concerned.
MR.
WAITE: That is on chromium directly on copper?
MR. EDDY: We use the wax
ring method for chromium directly on copper or brass with equally good results.
What I am trying to find out is why there would
be an advantage for the electrolytic method over a method as simple as the
hydrochloric
method.
MR. WAITE: One advantage is that
you could clamp the part into the instrument, there is no time lost. It is
just as fast, probably a little faster than drawing
a ring of wax, measuring your temperatures and determining that everything
is at the same temperature.
MR. EDDY: But if you have an irregular
surface, you cannot get down into a
cylindrical piece or anything similar.
MR. WAITE: We measure curves within
a half-inch radius in our particular parts
and have experienced no trouble. We have no parts with enough variation to
cause trouble. Once we have clamped the piece in position we can measure
successively first the chromium and then the nickel and copper on steel without
removing
the
piece. It could be measured in a matter of minutes.
MR. FRANK G. BEUCKMAN (Eastman
Kodak Company, Rochester, N. Y.): How do you keep the rubber washers from
deteriorating with time?
MR. WAITE: We buy extra
washers, they are very inexpensive, and we keep them
in distilled water.
MR. BEUCKMAN: How do you maintain
stability of size when a clamping method
is used?
MR. WAITE: It has to be done carefully.
We do not use too much pressure—you
get the feel of it, with experience. Our operators do it very well.