Nickel-boron nanolayer evolution on boron carbide particle surfaces during thermal treatment |
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Authors: | Kathy Lu Xiaojing Zhu |
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Affiliation: | Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 213 Holden Hall, Blacksburg, VA 24061, USA |
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Abstract: | This study is focused on reduction of Ni2O3 and B2O3 in the Ni-B nanolayer on B4C particle surfaces and understanding of the nanolayer composition and morphology changes. Initially, the nanolayer contains Ni2O3, B2O3, and amorphous boron. After 400 °C thermal treatment in a H2-Ar atmosphere, Ni2O3 is reduced to nickel; the nanolayer morphology is maintained and the coated particles demonstrate magnetism. As the thermal treatment temperature is increased to 550 °C, B2O3 is reduced to boron, which reacts with nickel and forms Ni2B. Simultaneously, the nanolayer evolves into nanoparticles. Thermal treatment temperature increase to 700-900 °C only causes Ni2B particle growth but does not fundamentally change the composition or phase. |
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Keywords: | Electroless chemical deposition Nickel-boron Boron carbide Thermal treatment X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy X-ray diffraction Scanning electron microscopy Crystal structure |
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