Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1475213 | Journal of the European Ceramic Society | 2009 | 12 Pages |
Ceramic mullite–SiC nanocomposites were successfully produced at temperatures below 1500 °C by the polymer pyrolysis technique. An alumina-filled poly(methylsilsesquioxane) compound was prepared by mechanically mixing and cross-linking via a catalyst prior to pyrolysis. Heat treatment of warm pressed alumina/polymer bulk samples under the exclusion of oxygen (inert argon atmosphere) up to 1500 °C initiated crystallization of mullite even at pyrolysis temperatures as low as 1300 °C. The influence of the filler and of the pyrolysis temperature on the crystallization behavior of the materials has been investigated. Based on thermal analysis in combination with elemental analysis and X-ray powder diffraction studies four polymer mixtures differing in type and content of nano-alumina powders were examined. Nano-sized γ-Al2O3 powders functionalized at the surface by octylsilane groups proved to be more reactive towards the preceramic polymer leading to the formation of a larger weight fraction of mullite crystals at lower processing temperatures (1300 °C) as compared to native nano-γ-Al2O3 filler. Moreover, the functionalized nano-alumina particles offer an enhanced homogeneity of the distribution of alumina nano-particles in the starting polysiloxane system. In consequence, the received ceramic samples exhibited a nano-microstructure consisting of crystals of mullite with an average dimension in the range of 60–160 nm and silicon carbide crystals in the range of 1–8 nm.