Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10629548 | Journal of the European Ceramic Society | 2014 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
A unique combination of high-energy ball-milling, annealing, and spark-plasma sintering has been used to process superhard B4C ceramics with ultrafine-grained, dense microstructures from commercially available powders, without sintering additives. It was found that the ultrafine powder prepared by high-energy ball-milling is hardly at all sinterable, but that B2O3 removal by gentle annealing in Ar provides the desired sinterability. A parametric study was also conducted to elucidate the role of the temperature (1600-1800 °C), time (1-9 min), and heating ramp (100 or 200 °C/min) in the densification and grain growth, and thus to identify optimal spark-plasma sintering conditions (i.e., 1700 °C for 3 min with 100 °C/min) to densify completely (>98.5%) the B4C ceramics with retention of ultrafine grains (â¼370 nm). Super-high hardness of â¼38 GPa without relevant loss of toughness (â¼3 MPa m1/2) was thus achieved, attributable to the smaller grain size and to the transgranular fracture mode of the B4C ceramics.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Ceramics and Composites
Authors
B. Malmal Moshtaghioun, Francisco L. Cumbrera, Angel L. Ortiz, Miguel Castillo-RodrÃguez, Diego Gómez-GarcÃa,