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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Development of an Experimentally Validated Finite Element Model for Spark Plasma Sintering of High Temperature Ceramics

Neff, Paul K., Neff, Paul K. January 2016 (has links)
Spark plasma sintering (SPS) is a powder consolidation technique used to rapidly densify a variety of material systems. SPS is capable of precisely controlling material microstructures and achieving non-equilibrium phases due to rapid heating and cooling rates through the simultaneous application of pressure and direct current. Due to these characteristics, SPS is an ideal processing technique for high temperature ceramics which require processing at temperatures greater than 1500°C. Due to the desirable properties obtained on small diameter materials processed by SPS, larger and more complex geometries are desired while maintaining sample microstructures. In order to accurately scale ceramics produced by SPS, a finite element model must be developed that can be used as a predictive tool. My research focuses on developing a finite element model for the spark plasma sintering furnace at the University of Arizona and validating modeled results using experimentally obtained data. Electrical and thermal conductivity as functions of temperature vary widely among different grades of commercially available electrode grade graphite at constant density. Modeled material properties are optimized in order to calibrate modeled results to experimentally obtained data (i.e. measured current, voltage, and temperature distributions). Sensitivity analysis is performed on the model to better understand model physics and predictions. A calibrated model is presented for 20mm ZrB2 and Si3N4 discs. Sample temperature gradients are experimentally confirmed using grain size and β-Si3N4 phase composition. The model is used to investigate scale up from 20mm to 30mm discs and 30mm rings as well as effects of processing conditions on β-Si3N4 content.
2

Microstructure and Mechanical Properties of Nanofiller Reinforced Tantalum-Niobium Carbide Formed by Spark Plasma Sintering

Rudolf, Christopher Charles 26 May 2016 (has links)
Ultra high temperature ceramics (UHTC) are candidate materials for high temperature applications such as leading edges for hypersonic flight vehicles, thermal protection systems for spacecraft, and rocket nozzle throat inserts due to their extremely high melting points. Tantalum and Niobium Carbide (TaC and NbC), with melting points of 3950°C and 3600°C, respectively, have high resistivity to chemical attack, making them ideal candidates for the harsh environments UHTCs are to be used in. The major setbacks to the implementation of UHTC materials for these applications are the difficulty in consolidating to full density as well as their low fracture toughness. In this study, small amounts of sintering additive were used to enhance the densification and Graphene Nanoplatelets (GNP) were dispersed in the ceramic composites to enhance the fracture toughness. While the mechanisms of toughening of GNP addition to ceramics have been previously documented, this study focused on the anisotropy of the mechanisms. Spark plasma sintering was used to consolidate both bulk GNP pellets and near full relative density TaC-NbC ceramic composites with the addition of both sintering aid and GNP and resulted in an aligned GNP orientation perpendicular to the SPS pressing axis that allowed the anisotropy to be studied. In situ high load indentation was performed that allowed real time viewing of the deformation mechanisms for enhanced analysis. The total energy dissipation when indenting the bulk GNP pellet in the in-plane GNP direction was found to be 270% greater than in the out-of-plane orientation due to the resulting deformation mechanisms that occurred. In GNP reinforced TaC-NbC composites, the projected residual damaged area as a result of indentation was 89% greater when indenting on the surface of the sintered compact (out-of-plane GNP orientation) than when indenting in the orthogonal direction (in-plane GNP orientation) which is further evidence to the anisotropy of the GNP reinforcement.
3

Contribuição ao estudo de sinterização sem pressão assistida por campo elétrico de zircônia tetragonal estabilizada com ítria / Contribution to the study of electric field-assisted pressureless sintering tetragonal yttria-stabilized zirconia

Sabrina Gonçalves de Macedo Carvalho 21 February 2018 (has links)
Foram efetuados experimentos de sinterização em cerâmica policristalina de ZrO2: 3 mol% Y2O3 (3YSZ) por três métodos: aquecimento seguindo o perfil temperatura ambiente 1400 °C temperatura ambiente (sinterização convencional), aquecimento a partir da temperatura ambiente até 1000-1100 °C sob aplicação de campo elétrico AC (sinterização dinâmica assistida por campo elétrico), e aquecimento até 1000-1100 °C para aplicação do campo elétrico AC (sinterização isotérmica assistida por campo elétrico). O último método foi aplicado em amostras sob diferentes condições (amostras a verde, amostras a verde compactadas isostaticamente com diferentes pressões, amostras pré-sinterizadas a 1400 °C) e diferentes condições experimentais (diferentes frequências do campo elétrico AC, campo elétrico DC, diferentes limites de densidade de corrente, aplicação de carga simultaneamente à aplicação do campo elétrico). Todas as amostras de 3YSZ sinterizadas, além de terem a densidade aparente determinada, tiveram a superfície observada em microscópio eletrônico de varredura para avaliação do tamanho médio de grão e distribuição do tamanho de grão (em alguns casos, ao longo da superfície, do centro para a borda). Além disso, análises de espectroscopia de impedância foram feitas para avaliar a contribuição intergranular (principalmente contorno de grão) e intragranular (grãos) para a resistividade elétrica. A ideia principal foi coletar dados sobre sinterização assistida por campo elétrico, procurando entender o mecanismo atuando no método de sinterização, conhecido por produzir peças cerâmicas densas em temperaturas menores do que as usadas em sinterização convencional, em tempos curtos, e com inibição do crescimento de grão. Os resultados principais mostram que: 1) o nível de retração depende da frequência do campo elétrico AC, 2) quanto maior a porosidade, maior o efeito do campo elétrico, 3) quanto maior o valor da densidade de corrente, maior a densificação, até um determinado limite a partir do qual a amostra é danificada, 4) o pulso de corrente elétrica flui preferencialmente pela região intergranular, e 5) amostras submetidas a sinterização assistida por campo elétrico mostraram aumento da condutividade do contorno de grão. Um mecanismo para a sinterização assistida por campo elétrico é proposto, baseado em que 1) aquecimento Joule é o efeito principal, 2) a corrente elétrica, que surge como resultado da aplicação do campo elétrico, flui pela região intergranular, 3) o aquecimento Joule difunde as espécies químicas depletadas nas interfaces de volta aos grãos, aumentando a concentração de defeitos, levando ao aumento da condutividade do grão, e 4) o aquecimento Joule é responsável por diminuir a barreira potencial na região de carga espacial, inibindo o bloqueio dos íons de oxigênio nos contornos de grão. / Experiments on sintering ZrO2: 3 mol% Y2O3 polycrystalline ceramics (Y-TZP, hereafter 3YSZ) were carried out by three methods: heating following the room temperature-1400°C-room temperature profile (conventional sintering), heating from room temperature to 1000-1100°C under an applied AC electric field (dynamic electric field-assisted sintering), and heating to 1000-1100°C for application of an AC electric field (isothermal electric field-assisted sintering). The last method was performed under different specimen conditions (green pellets, green pellets isostatically pressed with different loads, pellets pre-sintered at 1400°C) and different experimental conditions (different frequencies of the AC electric field, DC electric fields, different limitation of the electric current densities, applying loads simultaneously to application of the electric field). All 3YSZ sintered samples, besides having their apparent densities determined, had their surfaces observed in a scanning electron microscope to evaluate average grain size and distribution of grain sizes (some, along the surface from the center to the border). Moreover, impedance spectroscopy analyses were carried out to evaluate the intergranular (mainly grain boundary) and intragranular (bulk) contributions to the electrical resistivity. The primary idea was to collect data on electric field-assisted sintering looking for understanding the mechanisms behind that sintering method, known to produce dense ceramic pieces at temperatures lower than those used in conventional sintering, in short times and inhibiting grain growth. The main results show that 1) the shrinkage level depends on the AC frequency, 2) the larger the porosity the higher the electric field effect, 3) higher current densities promotes higher densification up to a limit that could damage the sample, 4) the electric current pulse follows preferentially the intergranular instead of the bulk pathway, and 5) electric field-assisted sintered specimens show enhanced grain boundary conductivity. A mechanism for the electric field-assisted sintering is proposed based on that 1) Joule heating is the primary event, 2) the electric current, as a result of the electric field, follows the intergranular pathway, 3) Joule heating diffuses chemical species depleted at the interfaces back to the bulk, increasing the defect concentration, leading to the enhancement of the bulk conductivity, and 4) that same Joule heating is responsible for the decrease of the potential barrier at the space charge region, inhibiting the blocking of oxide ions at the grain boundaries.
4

Contribuição ao estudo de sinterização sem pressão assistida por campo elétrico de zircônia tetragonal estabilizada com ítria / Contribution to the study of electric field-assisted pressureless sintering tetragonal yttria-stabilized zirconia

Carvalho, Sabrina Gonçalves de Macedo 21 February 2018 (has links)
Foram efetuados experimentos de sinterização em cerâmica policristalina de ZrO2: 3 mol% Y2O3 (3YSZ) por três métodos: aquecimento seguindo o perfil temperatura ambiente 1400 °C temperatura ambiente (sinterização convencional), aquecimento a partir da temperatura ambiente até 1000-1100 °C sob aplicação de campo elétrico AC (sinterização dinâmica assistida por campo elétrico), e aquecimento até 1000-1100 °C para aplicação do campo elétrico AC (sinterização isotérmica assistida por campo elétrico). O último método foi aplicado em amostras sob diferentes condições (amostras a verde, amostras a verde compactadas isostaticamente com diferentes pressões, amostras pré-sinterizadas a 1400 °C) e diferentes condições experimentais (diferentes frequências do campo elétrico AC, campo elétrico DC, diferentes limites de densidade de corrente, aplicação de carga simultaneamente à aplicação do campo elétrico). Todas as amostras de 3YSZ sinterizadas, além de terem a densidade aparente determinada, tiveram a superfície observada em microscópio eletrônico de varredura para avaliação do tamanho médio de grão e distribuição do tamanho de grão (em alguns casos, ao longo da superfície, do centro para a borda). Além disso, análises de espectroscopia de impedância foram feitas para avaliar a contribuição intergranular (principalmente contorno de grão) e intragranular (grãos) para a resistividade elétrica. A ideia principal foi coletar dados sobre sinterização assistida por campo elétrico, procurando entender o mecanismo atuando no método de sinterização, conhecido por produzir peças cerâmicas densas em temperaturas menores do que as usadas em sinterização convencional, em tempos curtos, e com inibição do crescimento de grão. Os resultados principais mostram que: 1) o nível de retração depende da frequência do campo elétrico AC, 2) quanto maior a porosidade, maior o efeito do campo elétrico, 3) quanto maior o valor da densidade de corrente, maior a densificação, até um determinado limite a partir do qual a amostra é danificada, 4) o pulso de corrente elétrica flui preferencialmente pela região intergranular, e 5) amostras submetidas a sinterização assistida por campo elétrico mostraram aumento da condutividade do contorno de grão. Um mecanismo para a sinterização assistida por campo elétrico é proposto, baseado em que 1) aquecimento Joule é o efeito principal, 2) a corrente elétrica, que surge como resultado da aplicação do campo elétrico, flui pela região intergranular, 3) o aquecimento Joule difunde as espécies químicas depletadas nas interfaces de volta aos grãos, aumentando a concentração de defeitos, levando ao aumento da condutividade do grão, e 4) o aquecimento Joule é responsável por diminuir a barreira potencial na região de carga espacial, inibindo o bloqueio dos íons de oxigênio nos contornos de grão. / Experiments on sintering ZrO2: 3 mol% Y2O3 polycrystalline ceramics (Y-TZP, hereafter 3YSZ) were carried out by three methods: heating following the room temperature-1400°C-room temperature profile (conventional sintering), heating from room temperature to 1000-1100°C under an applied AC electric field (dynamic electric field-assisted sintering), and heating to 1000-1100°C for application of an AC electric field (isothermal electric field-assisted sintering). The last method was performed under different specimen conditions (green pellets, green pellets isostatically pressed with different loads, pellets pre-sintered at 1400°C) and different experimental conditions (different frequencies of the AC electric field, DC electric fields, different limitation of the electric current densities, applying loads simultaneously to application of the electric field). All 3YSZ sintered samples, besides having their apparent densities determined, had their surfaces observed in a scanning electron microscope to evaluate average grain size and distribution of grain sizes (some, along the surface from the center to the border). Moreover, impedance spectroscopy analyses were carried out to evaluate the intergranular (mainly grain boundary) and intragranular (bulk) contributions to the electrical resistivity. The primary idea was to collect data on electric field-assisted sintering looking for understanding the mechanisms behind that sintering method, known to produce dense ceramic pieces at temperatures lower than those used in conventional sintering, in short times and inhibiting grain growth. The main results show that 1) the shrinkage level depends on the AC frequency, 2) the larger the porosity the higher the electric field effect, 3) higher current densities promotes higher densification up to a limit that could damage the sample, 4) the electric current pulse follows preferentially the intergranular instead of the bulk pathway, and 5) electric field-assisted sintered specimens show enhanced grain boundary conductivity. A mechanism for the electric field-assisted sintering is proposed based on that 1) Joule heating is the primary event, 2) the electric current, as a result of the electric field, follows the intergranular pathway, 3) Joule heating diffuses chemical species depleted at the interfaces back to the bulk, increasing the defect concentration, leading to the enhancement of the bulk conductivity, and 4) that same Joule heating is responsible for the decrease of the potential barrier at the space charge region, inhibiting the blocking of oxide ions at the grain boundaries.
5

Interfacial Transitions and Microstructure Evolution of Materials

Lucas D Robinson (12156105) 25 April 2023 (has links)
<p>    </p> <p>In this thesis, a thermodynamically consistent phase field formulation was developed to identify the physical origin of interfacial transitions that drive macroscopic phenomena, start- ing at the single-particle length scale and building up to the polycrystalline length scale. At the single-particle length scale, the framework identified two interfacial phases that are stable at the surface of Sn nanoparticles: 1) a disordered interfacial phase, i.e., the experimentally observed premelted surface layer; and 2) an ordered surficial phase displaying a remnant de- gree of order in fully melted particles. Regimes of melting behavior as a function of particle size and temperature are discussed. To bridge the gap between single-particle and densified polycrystals, an analytical model was developed to capture the physical driving forces for densification during electric field-assisted sintering. Here, the model acknowledges the struc- tural contributions of particle-particle interfaces to the strength of mechanical, electrical, and surficial driving forces for densification, and shows good agreement with experimental flash sintering data. Finally, the theory was applied to polycrystalline LiCoO<sub>2</sub> (LCO) and shows that the experimentally observed metal-insulator transition is driven by grain bound- ary lithium segregation, the interfacial misorientation, and the size of the abutting grains. A critical misorientation as a function of the macroscopic lithium content exists above which the grain boundaries undergo a metal-insulating transition, suggesting that the fabrication of textured LCO microstructures will delay the metal-insulator transition. </p>
6

Flash sintering of tungsten carbide

Mazo, Isacco 14 July 2023 (has links)
Binderless tungsten carbide (BTC) ceramics are inherently difficult to process and very brittle. Most consolidation techniques for processing pure WC powder require long sintering times and intense energy consumption. High-T pressureless and pressure-assisted sintering processes often lead to low-quality and coarsened microstructures, thus limiting the use of WC ceramics to few niche applications. Field-assisted sintering techniques (FAST), like spark plasma sintering (SPS), significantly improve the densification of fine and ultrafine WC powders. However, SPS requires high current outputs and expensive apparatus. SPS ceramics still lack adequate toughness to extend the use of BTC components in heavy-duty applications requiring reliable load-bearing capability and/or resistance against rapid and unexpected impacts or temperature drops. This research work explored a new consolidation route capable of boosting the mass transport phenomena (accelerated sintering) and, simultaneously, introducing new microstructural features. The process called flash sintering (FS) offers great potential in accelerating diffusion phenomena and altering the crystallographic and/or the defect chemistry of the sintered ceramics. Many scientific studies reported structural alterations, enhanced plastic flow and material softening by introducing “out-of-equilibrium” characteristics. Currently, FS technology requires, for its activation, a negative dependence of the electrical resistivity with temperature (NTC) of the material to be sintered. This is a universal requirement for the flash event to occur thus theoretically inhibiting the flash sintering of conductive materials with a positive temperature coefficient for resistivity (PTC), like metals or WC. In the present work, we reported how during electrical resistance sintering (ERS) experiments conducted on pure WC nanopowders, a flash event was triggered during the first seconds of the process. This was demonstrated to occur thanks to the different evolution of the electrical properties of a granular compact with temperature. WC powders possess an initial NTC behaviour which can activate a transitory thermal runaway phenomenon which makes the activation of a flash event in these materials possible, intense enough to allow ultrafast densification in less than 10 s. This breakthrough allows to verify whether and how the flash event modifies the final sintered material. FS and SPS sintered ceramics were compared in their microstructural, physical and mechanical properties, thus pointing out how some peculiar modifications are exclusively present in the flash-sintered material. FS can stabilize the WC1-x metastable phase after cooling to room temperature, and this was demonstrated to alter the high-temperature deformation of WC micropillars during compression. In addition, FS BTC are inherently softer with respect to SPS ones, resulting in higher fracture toughness and slightly lower hardness. Even if not final, the results indicate how the flash sintering of WC can be explored further to process engineered BTC ceramics with an optimized hardness/toughness ratio and an enhanced deformability.
7

Densificação e condutividade elétrica da Zircônia-Escândia-Céria / Densification and electrical conductivity of Zirconia-Scandia-Ceria

Robson Lopes Grosso 22 May 2012 (has links)
Estudos recentes demonstram que o sistema cerâmico zircônia-escândia-céria (ScCeSZ) apresenta-se promissor para aplicações como eletrólito sólido em células a combustível de óxido sólido de temperaturas intermediárias de operação (600 a 800 °C). Neste trabalho, foi realizada a sinterização convencional, de duas etapas e assistida por campo elétrico do ZrO2 contendo 10% em mol de Sc2O3 e 1% em mol de CeO2 comercializado pela Fuel Cell Materials visando melhorar a densificação com reduzido tamanho médio de grãos. A condutividade elétrica de amostras densas de ScCeSZ sinterizadas pelos diferentes métodos foi investigada por espectroscopia de impedância. Diferentes condições de sinterização foram analisadas. A taxa de retração dos compactos é máxima a 1180 °C, determinada pela análise de dilatometria. Foi confirmado por difração de raios X que a adição de céria à zircônia-escândia promove a estabilização da fase cúbica à temperatura ambiente. No entanto, dependendo das condições de sinterização pode haver a formação de fases secundárias, as quais foram detectadas por difração de raios X e espectroscopia Raman. A sinterização assistida por campo elétrico promoveu a formação das fases cúbica e tetragonal. Considerando os métodos convencional e de duas etapas, para a obtenção do material cúbico monofásico é necessária uma seleção cuidadosa das condições de sinterização. Os valores de condutividade elétrica estão de acordo com as condutividades do ScCeSZ reportadas na literatura. / Recent reports show that scandia-and ceria-doped zirconia (ScCeSZ) is a promising material for application as solid electrolyte in solid oxide fuel cells operating at intermediate temperatures (600 - 800 °C). In this work, ZrO2 containing 10 mol% Sc2O3 and 1 mol% CeO2 commercial powder (Fuel Cell Materials) was used to investigate the densification along with the mean grain size in specimens sintered by different methods: conventional, two-step sintering and electric field assisted sintering. The electrical conductivity of dense sintered specimens was studied by impedance spectroscopy. The linear shrinkage was followed by dilatometry. The maximum shrinkage rate of powder compacts was obtained at 1180 ºC. X-ray diffraction experiments revealed that ceria stabilizes the cubic phase of scandia-doped zirconia at room temperature. However, secondary phases (rhombohedric and tetragonal) were detected by both X-ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopy depending on the sintering conditions. The field assisted sintering method resulted in specimens with cubic and tetragonal phases. In the case of conventional and two-step sintering methods, a careful selection of the temperatures and sintering times is essential to obtain a cubic single-phase material. Values of the electrical conductivity of ScCeSZ are in general agreement with those reported in the literature.
8

Densificação e condutividade elétrica da Zircônia-Escândia-Céria / Densification and electrical conductivity of Zirconia-Scandia-Ceria

Grosso, Robson Lopes 22 May 2012 (has links)
Estudos recentes demonstram que o sistema cerâmico zircônia-escândia-céria (ScCeSZ) apresenta-se promissor para aplicações como eletrólito sólido em células a combustível de óxido sólido de temperaturas intermediárias de operação (600 a 800 °C). Neste trabalho, foi realizada a sinterização convencional, de duas etapas e assistida por campo elétrico do ZrO2 contendo 10% em mol de Sc2O3 e 1% em mol de CeO2 comercializado pela Fuel Cell Materials visando melhorar a densificação com reduzido tamanho médio de grãos. A condutividade elétrica de amostras densas de ScCeSZ sinterizadas pelos diferentes métodos foi investigada por espectroscopia de impedância. Diferentes condições de sinterização foram analisadas. A taxa de retração dos compactos é máxima a 1180 °C, determinada pela análise de dilatometria. Foi confirmado por difração de raios X que a adição de céria à zircônia-escândia promove a estabilização da fase cúbica à temperatura ambiente. No entanto, dependendo das condições de sinterização pode haver a formação de fases secundárias, as quais foram detectadas por difração de raios X e espectroscopia Raman. A sinterização assistida por campo elétrico promoveu a formação das fases cúbica e tetragonal. Considerando os métodos convencional e de duas etapas, para a obtenção do material cúbico monofásico é necessária uma seleção cuidadosa das condições de sinterização. Os valores de condutividade elétrica estão de acordo com as condutividades do ScCeSZ reportadas na literatura. / Recent reports show that scandia-and ceria-doped zirconia (ScCeSZ) is a promising material for application as solid electrolyte in solid oxide fuel cells operating at intermediate temperatures (600 - 800 °C). In this work, ZrO2 containing 10 mol% Sc2O3 and 1 mol% CeO2 commercial powder (Fuel Cell Materials) was used to investigate the densification along with the mean grain size in specimens sintered by different methods: conventional, two-step sintering and electric field assisted sintering. The electrical conductivity of dense sintered specimens was studied by impedance spectroscopy. The linear shrinkage was followed by dilatometry. The maximum shrinkage rate of powder compacts was obtained at 1180 ºC. X-ray diffraction experiments revealed that ceria stabilizes the cubic phase of scandia-doped zirconia at room temperature. However, secondary phases (rhombohedric and tetragonal) were detected by both X-ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopy depending on the sintering conditions. The field assisted sintering method resulted in specimens with cubic and tetragonal phases. In the case of conventional and two-step sintering methods, a careful selection of the temperatures and sintering times is essential to obtain a cubic single-phase material. Values of the electrical conductivity of ScCeSZ are in general agreement with those reported in the literature.

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