Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1461713 | Ceramics International | 2013 | 8 Pages |
The dispersibility of colloidal alumina particles (median size 310 nm) was related to the surface potential, the solid concentration in a suspension and the pressure applied to the particles. The consolidation behavior of colloidal alumina particles with an isoelectric point pH 8.7 was examined using a developed pressure filtration apparatus at 1–10 MPa of applied pressure. The height of 7 or 20 vol% alumina suspensions at pH 3.0, 7.8 and 9.0 as a function of filtration time was fitted by a filtration model developed for a flocculated suspension rather than a traditional filtration model for a dispersed suspension. An increased pressure, a decrease of particle concentration and a porous microstructure of colloidal cake reduced the consolidation time of alumina suspension. The wet alumina compacts were significantly compressed during filtration but relaxed after the release of the applied pressure. However, the packing density of alumina compact after calcination at 700 °C was almost independent of the filtration pressure and controlled by the structure of network of alumina particles in a solution.