Production of ultrafine alpha alumina powders and fabrication of fine grained strong ceramics

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Abstract

Hydrous alumina powders, pure, seeded with alpha alumina, containing ammonium nitrate and containing both ammonium nitrate and seeds, were prepared by hydroxide precipitation. Their crystallization and sintering behaviour were investigated and mechanical properties of the ceramics were tested. Pure hydrous alumina transformed to alpha alumina crystals, with a size of ca. 200 nm, at 1200°C, after undergoing the usual metastable phase changes during heat-treatment. The powder needed to be sintered at 1600°C to achieve a high density. The ceramic had an average grain size of ca. 9 μm. Seeding lowered the transformation temperature to ca. 1120°C and caused the transformation to begin at ca. 600°C. The material could be sintered at 1500°C and had a grain size of 2 μm. The nitrate, predominantly present as ammonium nitrate, lowered the transformation temperature to ca. 1150°C and altered the proportion of the intermediate phases. However, the materials still had to be sintered at 1500°C to achieve >97% density. When both seed particles and nitrate ions were present the material almost completely transformed at 950°C to uniform crystals of alpha alumina with a size <60 nm that sintered to >99% theoretical density at 1450°C. The final ceramic had a uniformly grained (<1.0 μm) microstructure and exhibited strength up to 800 M Pa. © 1994 Chapman & Hall.

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APA

Rajendran, S. (1994). Production of ultrafine alpha alumina powders and fabrication of fine grained strong ceramics. Journal of Materials Science, 29(21), 5664–5672. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00349962

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