Comprehensive Review of Hard Ceramic Coatings for Aerospace Alloys: Fabrication, Characterization and Future Perspectives
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Hard ceramic coatings are essential for extending the performance of metal parts under the extreme heat and stress found in aerospace and defense environments. There is a major knowledge gap regarding this topic in the current literature. While there has been significant research on individual fabrication methods or specific coating materials separately, no previous review has combined experimental lifecycle data with a broad computational design approach that covers the entire design-to-deployment process. This review fills that gap by offering a unified roadmap from integrated computational materials engineering (ICME) to machine learning (ML). This roadmap speeds up the rational design of coatings for next-generation aerospace systems. The practical importance of this framework is its clear use in gas turbine engine qualification, hypersonic vehicle thermal protection, and landing gear surface engineering. It can cut down on experimental trial-and-error cycles by allowing ML-guided composition screening and condition-based maintenance through digital twin integration. The main ceramic material systems, tungsten carbide (WC), boron nitride (BN), boron carbide (B4C), silicon carbide (SiC), alumina (Al2O3), and zirconia (ZrO2), are examined for their protective roles in aerospace-grade alloys. A key contribution is the multiscale computational framework that includes density functional theory, molecular dynamics, finite element analysis, and ML-driven inverse design. Together, these methods improve predictions for thermal breakdown, multi-axial stress responses, and coating lifetime. Future research should focus on ultra-high-temperature ceramics, multifunctional self-healing coatings, and surface engineering methods driven by data.