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Infrared‐Transparent Y 2 O 3 –MgO Nanocomposites Fabricated by the Glucose Sol–Gel Combustion and Hot‐Pressing Technique
Author(s) -
Xu Shengquan,
Li Jiang,
Li Chaoyu,
Pan Yubai,
Guo Jingkun
Publication year - 2015
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.13681
Subject(s) - materials science , sintering , spinel , calcination , nanocomposite , composite number , combustion , infrared , transmittance , chemical engineering , analytical chemistry (journal) , ceramic , nanoparticle , phase (matter) , grain size , composite material , nanotechnology , metallurgy , chromatography , optics , chemistry , organic chemistry , physics , optoelectronics , engineering , catalysis
A glucose sol–gel combustion method has been developed to synthesize composite nanopowders with equal volume fractions of Y 2 O 3 and MgO. The synthesis involves the generation of precursor foam containing Y 3+ and Mg 2+ cations via the chemical and thermal degradation of glucose molecules in aqueous solutions. Subsequent calcination of the foam gave the composite nanopowders uniform composition and surface areas of 44–62 m 2 /g depending on the relative amount of glucose. Then the nanopowder with an average particle size of 19 nm was consolidated by the hot‐pressing technique with different sintering temperatures. The fabricated nanocomposite is mid‐infrared transparent as the result of fine grains, narrow grain size distribution, and uniform phase domains. The transmittance increases with increase in the sintering temperature and reaches 83.5% at 3–5 μm mid‐infrared wave range once the temperature reaches 1350°C, which is close to the theoretical value of 85%. And it is noteworthy that the cutoff wavelength reaches 9.6 μm, which is superior to those of spinel, AlON, and sapphire. And the Vickers hardness of the sample reaches 10.0 ± 0.1 GPa, which is significantly higher than those of the coarse grained single‐phase MgO and Y 2 O 3 . The results indicate that the glucose sol–gel combustion and hot‐pressing technique is an effective method to fabricate infrared transparent Y 2 O 3 –MgO nanocomposites.