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1.
Two-Stage Sintering of Alumina with Submicrometer Grain Size   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:1  
This work verifies the applicability of two-stage sintering as a means of suppressing the final stage grain growth of submicrometer alumina. The first heating step should be short at a relatively high-temperature (1400°–1450°C) in order to close porosity without significant grain growth. The second step at temperatures around 1150°C facilitates further densification with limited grain growth. Fine-grained alumina with a relative density of 98.8% and a grain size of 0.9 μm was prepared by two-stage sintering. A standard sintering process resulted in ceramics with identical relative density and a grain size of 1.6 μm.  相似文献   

2.
The densification behavior of ZrO2 (+ 3 mol% Y2O3)/85 wt% Al2O3 powder compacts, prepared by the hydrolysis of metal chlorides, can be characterized by a transition- and an α-alumina densification stage. The sintering behavior is strongly determined by the densification of the transition alumina aggregates. Intra-aggregate porosity, resulting from calcination at 800°C, partly persists during sintering and alumina phase transformation and negatively influences further macroscopic densification. Calcination at 1200°C, however, densifies the transition alumina aggregates prior to sintering and enables densification to almost full density (96%) within 2 h at 1450°C, thus obtaining a microstructure with an alumina and a zirconia grain size of 1 μm and 0.3–0.4 μm, respectively.  相似文献   

3.
The sintering behavior of compacts of ultrafine silicon powder (0.02 to 0.1 μm particle size) was investigated. Two sintering modes occur: normal sintering associated with densification and subnormal sintering without densification. The micro-structure developed in normal sintering has a fine grain size (0.05 to 0.3 μm) and fine porosity; the grains contain stacking faults and twins. The microstructure developed in subnormal sintering exhibits larger grains (∼1 μm in size) and coarse pores. Green densities >42% of theoretical and temperatures >1100°C are required for densification. Densification follows an exponential time and temperature dependence with an activation energy of 470 kJ/mol, indicating bulk diffusion as the transport mechanism. Grain-boundary diffusion is thought to be inhibited by grain-boundary oxide films. The carbon phase-separates into discrete amorphous regions and is thought to have little effect on sintering behavior.  相似文献   

4.
Nanocrystalline, single-phase undoped ZnO was sintered to 95%–98% of theoretical density at 650°–700°C, using pressureless isothermal sintering. The density increased very rapidly at 500°–600°C, remained constant with sintering temperature until ∼900°C, and then decreased slightly. The estimated activation energy for densification at 600°–700°C (275 kJ/mol) was comparable to grain-growth activation energies previously reported for microcrystalline ZnO but much greater than the grain-growth activation energy measured in the present work. A bimodal microstructure, consisting of nanocrystalline grains within larger ensembles ("supergrains"), was observed, and both modes grew as the sintering temperature increased. The grain-growth activation energy for the nanocrystalline grains was extremely low, ∼20 kJ/mol. The activation energy for the growth of the supergrains depended strongly on temperature but was ∼54 kJ/mol at >500°C. The important mechanisms probably are rearrangement of the nanoparticle grains, with simultaneous surface and boundary diffusion, and vapor transport above 900°C.  相似文献   

5.
Two-step sintering (TSS) was applied to suppress the accelerated grain growth of sub-micron (~150 nm) alumina powder. The application of an optimum TSS regime led to a remarkable decrease of grain size down to ~500 nm; while the grain size of the full-dense structures produced by conventional sintering ranged between 1 and 2 μm. To find how important the temperatures at sintering steps might be, several TSS regimes were conducted. The results showed that the temperatures at both sintering steps play vital roles in densification and grain growth of the alumina compacts. Based on the results, the optimum regime consisted of heating the green bodies up to 1250 °C (first step) and then holding at 1150 °C for more than 60 h (second step). This yielded the finest microstructure with no deterioration of the densification. Heating at 1300 °C (first step) and then at 1200 °C (second step) was not a successful procedure. Lowering the temperature of the second step down to 1100 °C resulted in exhaustion of the densification at 88% -theoretical density. A nearly full-dense structure with an average grain size of 850 nm was obtained when the temperature of the second step was increased to 1150 °C. Empirical results show that not only the first step temperature has to be high enough to reach a structure containing unstable pores, but the second sintering temperature must also be high enough to activate the densification mechanism without grain growth. This means that a considerable densification at the first step does not imply enough second-step densification.  相似文献   

6.
In the present study, α-SiC powder is coated with pyridineborane (BH3·C5H5N), a liquid molecular compound, which forms a boron carbonitride (BC3.5N) layer by heat treatment at 1000°C under argon. The precipitation method leads to an improved chemical homogeneity in the compacted powder resulting in enhanced densification and significant reduction in grain growth during subsequent sintering at temperatures exceeding 2070°C. Thus, small average grain sizes of d 50= 1.3 μm and a narrow grain size distribution ( d 10= 0.6 μm, d 90= 2.2 μm) are detected in the liquid-phase-processed sample sintered at 2200°C for 0.5 h in argon. Final densities of at least 98% of theoretical could be obtained by pressureless sintering at 2100°C. These results as well as the microstructural distribution of the sintering aids in the densified samples are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Microwave Sintering of Alumina at 2.45 GHz   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The sintering kinetics and microstructural evolution of alumina tubes (∼17 mm length, ∼9 mm inner diameter, and ∼11 mm outer diameter) were studied by conventional and microwave heating at 2.45 GHz. Temperature during microwave heating was measured with an infrared pyrometer and was calibrated to ±10°C. With no hold at sintering temperature, microwave-sintered samples reached 95% density at 1350°C versus 1600°C for conventionally heated samples. The activation energy for microwave sintering was 85 ± 10 kJ/mol, whereas the activation energy for conventionally sintered samples was 520 ± 14 kJ/mol. Despite the difference in temperature, grains grew from ∼1.0 μm at 86% density to ∼2.6 μm at 98% density for both conventionally sintered and microwave-sintered samples. The grain size/density trajectory was independent of the heating source. It is concluded that the enhanced densification with microwave heating is not a consequence of fast-firing and therefore is not a result in the change in the relative rates of surface and grain boundary diffusion in the presence of microwave energy.  相似文献   

8.
Two-step hot-pressing sintering (TSS) was applied to consolidate nanocomposite tungsten carbide-magnesia (WC-MgO) powders. The first step sintering was employed at a higher temperature to obtain an initial high density, and the second step was held at a lower temperature by isothermal sintering for several hours to increase bulk density without significant grain growth. The experimental results showed the sintering temperature plays an important role in densification and grain growth of WC-MgO compacts. The optimum TSS regime consisted of heating at 1750 °C (1st step) and 1550 °C (2nd step), resulting in the formation of near full dense microstructure (0.99 TD) with suppressed grain growth (2.59 μm). Accordingly, the improvement on the mechanical properties, including increase in the hardness (from 16.7 to 18.4 GPa), fracture toughness (from 10.2 to 12.95 MPa m1/2) and flexural strength (from 976.6 to 1283.7 MPa), was also observed due to the grain refining and full dense bulk.  相似文献   

9.
Master sintering curves were constructed for dry-pressed compacts composed of either a nanocrystalline or a microcrystalline ZnO powder using constant heating rate dilatometry data and an experimentally determined apparent activation energy for densification of 268±25 and 296±21 kJ/mol, respectively. The calculated activation energies for densification are consistent with one another, and with values reported in the literature for ZnO densification by grain boundary diffusion. Grain boundary diffusion appears to be the single dominant mechanism controlling intermediate-stage densification in both the nanocrystalline and the microcrystalline ZnO during sintering from 65% to 90% of the theoretical density (TD). Based on both the consistency of the calculated activation energy as a function of density and the narrow dispersion of the sintering data about the master sintering curve (MSC) for the nanocrystalline ZnO, there is no evidence of either significantly enhanced surface diffusion or grain growth during sintering relative to the microcrystalline ZnO. The MSC constructed for the nanocrystalline ZnO was used to design time–temperature profiles to successfully achieve four different target sintered densities on the MSC, demonstrating the applicability of the MSC theory to nanocrystalline ceramic sintering. The most significant difference in sintering behavior between the two ZnO powders is the enhanced densification in the nanocrystalline ZnO powder at shorter times and lower temperatures. This difference is attributed to a scaling (i.e., particle size) effect.  相似文献   

10.
Sintering of Zinc Oxide Doped with Antimony Oxide and Bismuth Oxide   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The phase change, densification, and microstructure development of ZnO doped with both Bi2O3 and Sb2O3 are studied to better understand the sintering behavior of ZnO varistors. The densification behavior is related to the formation of pyrochlore and liquid phases; the densification is retarded by the former and promoted by the latter. The pyrochlore phase, whose composition is Bi3/2ZnSb3/2O7, appears below 700°C. The formation temperature of the liquid phase depends on the Sb/Bi ratio: about 750°C for Sb/Bi < 1 by the eutectic melting in the system ZnO—Bi2O3, and about 1000°C for Sb/Bi > 1 by the reaction of the pyrochlore phase with ZnO. Hence, the densification rate is determined virtually by the Sb/Bi ratio and not by the total amount of additives. The microstructure depends on the sintering temperature. Sintering at 1000°C forms intragrain pyrochlore particles in ZnO grains as well as intergranular layers, but the intragrain particles disappear at 1200°C by the increased amount of liquid phase, which enhances the mobility of the solid second phase.  相似文献   

11.
《Ceramics International》2017,43(10):7594-7599
The effects of two-step sintering (TSS) on the mechanical properties and hydrothermal ageing resistance of yttria-stabilized tetragonal zirconia polycrystals (Y-TZP) were investigated. In TSS, the first step involved heating the samples up to 1400 °C at a heating rate of 10 °C/min and holding the samples at this temperature for 1 min. The second step involved sintering by cooling the samples down to 1200 °C and holding the samples at this temperature for various holding times (t) ranging from 0 to 30 h before cooling to room temperature. Moreover, TSS promoted densification with increasing holding time without sacrificing the mechanical properties of the sintered body and causing abnormal grain growth. The average grain size was found not to be affected by the long holding times, and the final microstructure composed of a uniformly distributed tetragonal grain having sizes ranging from 0.24 to 0.26 µm. The beneficial effect of TSS in suppressing the hydrothermal ageing of Y-TZP has been revealed in the present work. In particular, samples sintered at t=20 and 30 h exhibited excellent resistance to low-temperature degradation when exposed to superheated steam at 180 °C, attributed mainly to the enhance densification of the sintered bodies.  相似文献   

12.
For a few oxide ceramics, the use of an initial precoarsening step prior to densification (referred to as two-step sintering) has been observed to produce an improvement in the microstructural homogeneity during subsequent sintering. In the present work, the effect of a precoarsening step (50 h at 800°C) on the subsequent densification and microstructural evolution of high-quality alumina (Al2O3) powder compacts during constant-heating-rate sintering (4°C/min to 1450°C) was characterized in detail. The data were compared with those for similar compacts that were sintered conventionally (without the heat treatment step) and used to explore the mechanism of microstructural improvement during two-step sintering. After the precoarsening step, the average pore size was larger, but the distribution in pore sizes was narrower, than those for similar compacts that were sintered conventionally to 800°C. In subsequent sintering, the microstructure of the precoarsened compact evolved in a more homogeneous manner and, at the same density, the amount of closed porosity was lower for the compacts that were sintered by the two-step technique, in comparison to the conventional heating schedule. Furthermore, a measurably higher final density, a smaller average grain size, and a narrower distribution in grain sizes were achieved with the two-step technique. The microstructural refinement that was produced by the two-step sintering technique is explained in terms of a reduction in the effects of differential densification and the resulting delay of the pore channel pinch-off to higher density.  相似文献   

13.
Homogeneous and nanosized (28 nm crystallite size) doped-ZnO ceramic powders were obtained by a metallorganic polymeric method. Calcining and granulating resulted in green compacts with uniform powder packing and a narrow pore-size distribution (pore size 19 nm). Dense ceramic bodies (>99% of theoretical) were fabricated by normal liquid-phase sintering at 850° and 940°C for 1–5 h. Apparently, the low pore-coordination number allowed a uniform filling of the small pores by the liquid formed in the early stages of sintering, and, consequently, high shrinkage and rapid densification occurred in a short temperature interval (825°–850°C). At these sintering temperatures, limited grain growth occurred, and the grain size was maintained at <1 μm. Ceramics so-fabricated showed a nonlinear coefficient, α, of ≥70, and a breakdown voltage, V b (1 mA/cm2), of ≥1500 V/mm. The high electrical performance of the doped-ZnO dense ceramics was attributed to liquid-phase recession on cooling, which enhanced the ZnO-ZnO direct contacts and the potential barrier effect.  相似文献   

14.
This paper demonstrates that fine-grained (2–3 μm), transparent Nd:YAG can be achieved at SiO2 doping levels as low as 0.02 wt% by the sinter plus hot isostatic pressing (HIP) approach. Fine grain size is assured by sintering to 98% density, in order to limit grain growth, followed by HIP. Unlike dry-pressed samples, tape-cast samples were free of large, agglomerate-related pores after sintering, and thus high transparency (i.e., >80% transmission at 1064 nm) could be achieved by HIP at <1750°C along with lower silica levels, thereby avoiding conditions shown to cause exaggerated grain growth. Grain growth was substantially limited at lower SiO2 levels because silica is soluble in the YAG lattice up to ∼0.02–0.1 wt% at 1750°C, thus allowing sintering and grain growth to occur by solid-state diffusional processes. In contrast, liquid phase enhanced densification and grain growth occur at ∼0.08–0.14 wt% SiO2, especially at higher temperatures, because the SiO2 solubility limit is exceeded.  相似文献   

15.
Grain-oriented Bi2WO6 ceramics were fabricated by normal sintering techniques. Platelike crystallites were initially synthesized by a fused salt process using an NaCl-KCI melt. When calcined at <800°C, the Bi2WO6 crystallites are 3∼5 μ m in size and, at >850°C, =100 μm. After dissolving away the salt matrix, the Bi2WO6 particles were mixed with an organic binder and tapecast to align the platelike crystallites. Large particles were easily oriented by tapecasting but the sinterability of the tape was poor. Preferred orientation of small particles was increased by tapecasting and grain growth during sintering further improves the degree of orientation. Sintering above the 950°C phase transition, however, results in discontinuous grain growth and low densities. Optimum conditions for obtaining highly oriented ceramics with high density occur at sintering temperatures of 900°C using fine-grained powders which yield orientation factors of =0.88 and densities of 94% theoretical.  相似文献   

16.
The sintering properties and microstructure of La1− x A x NbO4 powders ( x =0, 0.005, and 0.02 and A=Ca, Sr, and Ba), prepared by spray pyrolysis have been investigated. Dense materials (>97%) were obtained by conventional sintering at 1200°C and by hot pressing (25 MPa) at 1050°C, respectively. Homogeneous materials were obtained and the average grain size obtained by the two densification methods was ∼2.0 and ∼0.4 μm, respectively, for the 2% doped materials. Pure lanthanum ortho-niobate (LaNbO4) showed a higher degree of grain growth. In the acceptor-doped materials, secondary phases were observed to inhibit grain growth at 1200°C. At 1400°C or higher, molten secondary phases in the Ba-doped materials resulted in severe grain growth, causing microcracking during cooling due to crystallographic anisotropy. A low solubility of AO (A=Ca, Sr, and Ba) in LaNbO4 is inferred from the presence of secondary phases, and 1 mol% solubility of SrO in LaNbO4 was found by electron microprobe analysis. The electrical conductivity in wet hydrogen of the materials demonstrated that the main charge carrier was protons up to 1000°C and reached a maximum value of ∼8·10−4 S/cm at 900°C.  相似文献   

17.
Role of Particle Substructure in the Sintering of Monosized Titania   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Monosized titania particles (∼0.35-μ diameter) prepared by controlled hydrolysis of titanium tetraethoxide in ethanol were found to be porous agglomerates of ∼6-nm primary particles. The sintering behavior of compacts constituted of monodispersed agglomerates was evaluated, and changes in macroscopic dimensions were correlated with changes in particle microstructure and chemistry. The total volume shrinkage during sintering was ≥87%. Five contributions to the total shrinkage and the temperature ranges for the associated processes were identified: removal of chemisorbed water (from ambient to 250°C), crystallization to anatase (between 250° to 425°C), intra-agglomerate densification (425° to 800°C), conversion of anatase to rutile (600° to 800°C), and inter-agglomerate densification (>800°C). Approximately one-half the compact shrinkage was the result of agglomerate substructure changes. Studies of the agglomerate structural evolution indicated the intra-agglomerate densification and crystallite growth rates are the secondary factors, after compact packing, that influenced microstructure development.  相似文献   

18.
Microstructural Development of Silicon Carbide Containing Large Seed Grains   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Fine (}0.1μm) β-SiC powders, with 3.3 wt% large (}0.44μm) α-SiC or β-SiC particles (seeds) added, were hot-pressed at 1750°C and then annealed at 1850°C to enhance grain growth. Microstructural development during annealing was investigated using image analysis. The introduction of larger seeds into β-SiC accelerated the grain growth of elongated large grains during annealing, in which no appreciable β→α phase transformation occurred. The growth of matrix grains in materials with β-SiC seeds was slower than that in materials with α-SiC seeds. The material with β-SiC seeds, which was annealed at 1850°C for 4 h, had a bimodal microstructure of small matrix grains and large elongated grains. In contrast, the material with α-SiC seeds, also annealed at 1850°C for 4 h, had a uniform microstructure consisting of elongated grains. The fracture toughnesses of the annealed materials with α-SiC and β-SiC seeds were 5.5 and 5.4 MPa·1/2, respectively. Such results suggested that further optimization of microstructure should be possible with β-SiC seeds, because of the remnant driving force for grain growth caused by the bimodal microstructure.  相似文献   

19.
In this work, we demonstrate a hybrid cold sintering/spark plasma sintering (CSP-SPS) process to densify ZnO ceramic with controlled grain growth. The densification of ZnO is initially activated at 85 °C, and high densities (>98%) are achieved at 200–300 °C in only 5 min with a low assisted pressure of 3.8–50 MPa. The microstructure of ZnO grains experiences a mild coarsening from ~205–680 nm during the CSP-SPS. In comparison, a much higher temperature (>770 °C) is required to sinter ZnO ceramic via SPS, and the grain size exhibits an obvious overgrowth to ~10 µm. The calculated apparent activation energy of grain growth using CSP-SPS is 69.3 ± 6 kJ/mol, which is much lower than that of SPS samples with 296.8 ± 59 kJ/mol. In addition, the conduction mechanism of the CSP-SPS and SPS samples is investigated using impedance spectroscopy. Overall, CSP-SPS is promising for the fabrication of fine ceramics with mild sintering conditions.  相似文献   

20.
Ultrafine (<0.1 μm) high-purity θ-Al2O3 powder containing 3–17.5 mol%α-Al2O3 seeds was used to investigate the kinetics and microstructural evolution of the θ-Al2O3 to α-Al2O3 transformation. The transformation and densification of the powder that occurred in sequence from 960° to 1100°C were characterized by quantitative X-ray diffractometry, dilatometry, mercury intrusion porosimetry, and transmission and scanning electron microscopy. The relative bulk density and the fraction of α phase increased with annealing temperature and holding time, but the crystal size of the α phase remained ∼50 nm in all cases at the transformation stage (≤1020°C). The activation energy and the time exponent of the θ to α transformation were 650 ± 50 kJ/mol and 1.5, respectively. The results implied the transformation occurred at the interface via structure rearrangement caused by the diffusion of oxygen ions in the Al2O3 lattice. A completely transformed α matrix of uniform porosity was the result of appropriate annealing processes (1020°C for 10 h) that considerably enhanced densification and reduced grain growth in the sintering stage. The Al2O3 sample sintered at 1490°C for 1 h had a density of 99.4% of the theoretical density and average grain size of 1.67 μm.  相似文献   

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