Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1622215 Journal of Alloys and Compounds 2009 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Carbide preparation in a conventional route requires a huge instrumentation regarding melting the metal and graphite under vacuum at a very high temperature. However, mechanical milling of powder ingredients at room temperature can easily produce nanocrystalline metal carbides. This article reports the preparation of nanocrystalline Fe3C by mechanical milling of α-Fe and graphite powders under inert atmosphere at room temperature. Mössbauer spectra of ball-milled powder clearly reveal that the Fe3C phase is initiated at 3 h of milling and the stoichiometric Fe3C is formed after 5 h of milling. Further milling up to 8 h results in peak-broadening of X-ray diffraction pattern of Fe3C phase. Microstructure in terms of different lattice imperfections is characterized employing Rietveld's method of structure refinement. The phase transformation kinetics studied through Rietveld method reveals that a small number of carbon atoms diffuse into α-Fe matrix and Fe3C phase is formed through the solid-state reaction of nanocrystalline graphite and α-Fe powders during ball milling.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Metals and Alloys
Authors
, ,