Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10629476 | Journal of the European Ceramic Society | 2015 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
Zeolite 4A has been freeze-cast into highly porous monoliths with a cylindrical shape. The brittle monoliths, with lamellar or columnar pores and wall thicknesses between 8 and 35 μm, show a compressive mechanical response along the main pore axis that could be modeled by a buckling behavior. The failure strength is proportional to the density and the amount of transverse bridging across lamella, which was shown to be related to the pore cross-sectional aspect ratio. Monoliths with highly anisotropic pores with a cross-sectional aspect ratio higher than 3 yielded sequentially from the top surface, whereas monoliths with a pore aspect ratio lower than 3 were found to delaminate into longitudinal splinters. The freeze-cast monoliths show a sharp gas breakthrough front with a 1:9 mixture of CO2 and N2, indicating rapid uptake kinetics of the lamellar structures.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Ceramics and Composites
Authors
Arto Ojuva, Matti Järveläinen, Marcus Bauer, Lassi Keskinen, Masi Valkonen, Farid Akhtar, Erkki Levänen, Lennart Bergström,