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Extrusion of YAG Tubes Shows that Bottom‐up Processing is Not Always Optimal
Author(s) -
Taylor Nathan J.,
Laine Richard M.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
advanced functional materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.069
H-Index - 322
eISSN - 1616-3028
pISSN - 1616-301X
DOI - 10.1002/adfm.201301290
Subject(s) - sintering , materials science , extrusion , mixing (physics) , pyrolysis , hexagonal crystal system , grain size , grain growth , composite material , chemical engineering , metallurgy , crystallography , chemistry , physics , quantum mechanics , engineering
Liquid‐feed flame spray pyrolysis provides easily dispersed, unaggregated nanopowders with average particle sizes of 20–70 nm depending on the processing conditions. Their chemical compositions can be controlled to ppm levels via control of the initial precursor solution. In this paper, Y 3 Al 5 O 12 composition nanopowders are produced that are atomically mixed but offer a hexagonal crystal structure rather than a YAG structure. Y 2 O 3 and δ‐Al 2 O 3 nanopowders are also produced and mixed to evaluate reactive sintering. It is shown that nanopowder/polymer mixtures permit the extrusion of tubes that retain their shape on debindering and sintering to ≥95% theoretical density. More importantly, the sintering behavior of hex‐Y 3 Al 5 O 12 is compared with that of tubes formed using 3:5 Y 2 O 3 :δ‐Al 2 O 3 mixtures to test the so‐called bottom‐up paradigm, which suggests that mixing on the finest length scales should provide optimal control of sintering rates, final densities, and grain sizes. Instead, it is found that reactive sintering is faster and offers better control of final grain sizes. Dense sintered tubes are translucent, and dimensional uniformity is maintained from extrusion through sintering.