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Effect of K 2 SO 4 additions on properties of porous fibrous alumina ceramics prepared by DCC and lost‐mold method
Author(s) -
Liu YuXuan,
Chen AnNan,
Wu JiaMin,
Liu RongZhen,
Cheng LiJin,
Huo WenLong,
Li ChenHui,
Shi YuSheng
Publication year - 2018
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.15384
Subject(s) - materials science , sintering , porosity , ceramic , composite material , dispersant , suspension (topology) , mold , casting , tape casting , alumina ceramic , compressive strength , aluminosilicate , green body , raw material , dispersion (optics) , catalysis , biochemistry , physics , mathematics , chemistry , homotopy , pure mathematics , optics , organic chemistry
Flawless porous fibrous alumina ceramics with high performance were fabricated via a novel approach involving direct coagulation casting and lost‐mold method. Stable alumina suspensions were prepared by adding sodium tri‐polyphosphate as dispersant using alumina fibers as raw material and K 2 SO 4 as sintering aid. Resin‐coated sand molds with designed shapes for suspension casting were fabricated through 3D printing with subsequent post‐treatments. Alumina green bodies were obtained by in situ coagulation of the suspension after treating at 90°C within 40 minutes. Porous alumina ceramics were obtained after direct furnace sintering of green bodies without demolding, in which the molds would collapse automatically at around 650°C with less exhaust emission. The effect of various K 2 SO 4 contents and sintering temperatures on mechanical properties of porous ceramics was investigated. The SEM results showed that the fibers interconnected with obvious interfacial bondings on junctions when sintered at 1450°C. The XRD patterns showed that the sample sintered with various K 2 SO 4 additions consisted of different phases, mainly including aluminosilicates. Porosity of ceramic samples increased slightly whereas the compressive strength enhanced significantly with increasing K 2 SO 4 addition. The density of sintered samples with different K 2 SO 4 contents was in accord with the porosity variation tendency. The ceramic samples had uniform pore size distribution with average size from 3.18 to 7.24 μm as increasing K 2 SO 4 addition to 40 wt%. This approach may provide a convenient and general route to fabricate various dense and porous advanced ceramics with complex shapes and good composition homogeneity.