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Reactions and emissivity of cerium oxide with phosphate binder coating on basic refractory brick
Author(s) -
Juthapakdeeprasert Jindaporn,
Gavalda Diaz Oriol,
Lerdprom Wirat,
De Sousa Meneses Domingos,
Jayaseelan Doni D.,
Lee William E.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
international journal of applied ceramic technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.4
H-Index - 57
eISSN - 1744-7402
pISSN - 1546-542X
DOI - 10.1111/ijac.13416
Subject(s) - materials science , coating , microstructure , emissivity , brick , slurry , composite material , metallurgy , porosity , mineralogy , physics , optics , chemistry
High emissivity coatings which aim to help the cement industry reduce heat loss in its production process have been developed with different CeO 2 and AlH 6 O 12 P 3 ratios (1:3, 1:5, and 1:12 by volume). The coating slurries were shear thinning and after heat treatment in air at 1300°C, 1°C/min, dwell 3 hours, XRD revealed that CePO 4 forms more easily as the Ce/P ratio decreases. The composition with a 1:5 ratio of CeO 2 :AlH 6 O 12 P 3 was gun sprayed on basic refractory bricks, then heat treated under the same conditions as the slurries. SEM, (S)TEM and EDX were used to study thickness, microstructure, and chemical composition of the coatings which revealed that the coating was composed of pores, CeO 2 grains, CePO 4 grains, and M‐P‐O glass. SEM images show that CePO 4 was nucleated from a reaction between CeO 2 and AlH 6 O 12 P 3 . Consequently, CePO 4 grains (~2 µm diameter) were smaller than CeO 2 (~10 µm diameter). The emissivities of un‐coated and coated basic refractory bricks were measured at 1100 and 1300°C over the wave number range of 700‐12 000 cm −1 . At both temperatures, the emissivity of the coated bricks was higher than the uncoated bricks and the emissivity was measured to be higher at a higher temperature for both samples. The coated bricks gave the highest emissivity of 0.81 from 1050 to 11 000 cm −1 which is about twice the un‐coated bricks for the same conditions. This demonstrates that the developed high emissivity coating has potential to be used with basic refractory brick.