Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1475213 Journal of the European Ceramic Society 2009 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

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.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Ceramics and Composites
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