Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10624084 | Ceramics International | 2016 | 19 Pages |
Abstract
Macro-cellular porous silicon carbide-based foams were fabricated by reactive infiltration of melt silicon into porous carbonaceous preforms pyrolyzed from foamed SiC-filled phenolic resins (PF). The SiC-filled PF foams were prepared at 80 °C with different heating rate. The effect of heating rate on the foaming behavior of the liquid SiC-filled PF mixture and the microstructure of the foams were investigated. The foamed SiC-filled PF was then pyrolyzed at 1000 °C and infiltrated by melt Si at 1600 °C, leading to the formation of open macro-cellular structure. At a heating rate of 6 °C minâ1, Si-infiltrated foams with a porosity of ~72% and a mean pore size of ~0.5 mm were obtained. The Si-infiltrated foams with dense struts mainly inherited the pore structure of pyrolyzed preforms. The main phases of SiC-based foams were α-SiC, β-SiC and the remnant Si, which contributed to high compressive strength of the SiC-based foams.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Ceramics and Composites
Authors
Shao-Chun Xu, Nan-Long Zhang, Jian-Feng Yang, Bo Wang, Chang-Yeoul Kim,