Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1448944 Acta Materialia 2010 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

Zirconium oxycarbide powders with controlled composition ZrC0.94O0.05 were synthesized using the carboreduction of zirconia. They were further subjected to spark plasma sintering (SPS) under several applied loads (25, 50, 100 MPa). The densification mechanism of zirconium oxycarbide powders during the SPS was studied. An analytical model derived from creep deformation studies of ceramics was successfully applied to determine the mechanisms involved during the final stage of densification. These mechanisms were elucidated by evaluating the stress exponent (n) and the apparent activation energy (Ea) from the densification rate law. It was concluded that at low macroscopic applied stress (25 MPa), an intergranular glide mechanism (n ⩽ 2) governs the densification process, while a dislocation motion mechanism (n ⩾ 3) operates at higher applied load (100 MPa). Transmission electron microscopy observations confirm theses results. The samples treated at low applied stress appear almost free of dislocations, whereas samples sintered at high applied stress present a high dislocation density, forming sub-grain boundaries. High values of apparent activation energy (e.g. 687–774 kJ mol−1) are reached irrespective of the applied load, indicating that both mechanisms mentioned above are assisted by the zirconium lattice diffusion which thus appears to be the rate-limiting step for densification.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Ceramics and Composites
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