Sol-Gel Synthesis of Mullite Starting from Different Inorganic Precursors
Author(s) -
Lucía Téllez-Jurado,
Rosa María Arévalo Hernández,
Enrique RochaRangel
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of powder technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-7710
pISSN - 2090-7737
DOI - 10.1155/2013/268070
Subject(s) - mullite , materials science , isothermal process , acicular , sol gel , microstructure , ceramic , amorphous solid , chemical engineering , characterization (materials science) , aluminium silicate , aluminium , mineralogy , metallurgy , nanotechnology , crystallography , chemistry , thermodynamics , physics , engineering
Using silicotetraetilortosilicate (TEOS) mixed with aluminum tri-sec-butoxide (TSBAI) or aluminum cloaures mullite ceramics were created by the sol-gel method. The quantities used of each substance were those that led to obtain stoichiometric mullite (3Al2O3·2SiO2). The experimental methodology used for obtaining mullite consisted in: sol-gel synthesis of precursor materials, isothermal treatment of those materials, and characterization of resulting materials. In order to determine the advance of reactions during mullite formation, isothermal treatments between 300°C and 1600°C were performed, keeping the samples at each temperature during 4 h. From XRD results, it may be said that precursor powders originally amorphous start to crystallize in Al2O3 and SiO2 at 1200°C, and the mullite formation starts at 1200°C, with being completed at 1600°C. The use of TSBAI favors the formation of mullite crystals at lower temperature. From SEM observations a microstructure that presents primary mullite with randomly oriented grains of secondary mullite with acicular shapes and sizes that range between 1.25 and 1.50 μm long may be determined
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