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Aqueous and Nonaqueous Colloidal Processing of Difficult‐to‐Densify Ceramics: Suspension Rheology and Particle Packing
Author(s) -
Leo Silvia,
Tallon Carolina,
Franks George V.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of the american ceramic society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.9
H-Index - 196
eISSN - 1551-2916
pISSN - 0002-7820
DOI - 10.1111/jace.13220
Subject(s) - materials science , aqueous solution , rheology , dispersant , chemical engineering , sphere packing , suspension (topology) , relative density , colloid , viscosity , boron carbide , composite material , dispersion (optics) , sintering , chemistry , organic chemistry , physics , mathematics , homotopy , pure mathematics , optics , engineering
Aqueous and nonaqueous colloidal processing of zirconium diboride ( ZrB 2 ) and boron carbide ( B 4 C ) has been investigated. The aqueous and nonaqueous ZrB 2 and B 4 C suspension formulations have been optimized. The suspensions were cast into green bodies using slip casting. The correlation between the state of dispersion with the rheological properties of the suspensions and the resulting packing density was observed in both aqueous and nonaqueous processing. The attractive interactions between powder particles in water were difficult to overcome with electrical double layer or electrosteric repulsion. Reasonably low viscosity aqueous ZrB 2 suspensions up to 45 vol% solids could be prepared. It was not possible to produce low viscosity (viscosity below 1 Pa·s at shear rate of 100 s −1 ) aqueous B 4 C suspensions with solid content above 30 vol%. Slip casting of the weakly aggregated ZrB 2 suspensions resulted in low packing densities (~55% relative density) of the green bodies. On the other hand, dispersion of powder particles in nonaqueous media (cyclohexane and dodecane) enabled suspensions with lower viscosities and a higher maximum solid concentration (up to 50 vol%) to be prepared. The well‐dispersed nonaqueous suspensions promoted an efficient particle packing, resulting in higher green densities (64% and 62% relative density for ZrB 2 and B 4 C , respectively) compared to aqueous processing. The significantly high green densities are promising to allow densification of the materials at lower sintering temperature.