Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5437710 | Ceramics International | 2017 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Boron carbide compacts were produced by pressureless sintering at 2200 °C/2 h and 2250 °C/2 h in Ar atmosphere, using a starting powder with a particle size smaller than 3 µm. Effects of carbon addition (3.5 wt%) and methanol washing of the starting powder were investigated on the densification, Vickers hardness, and micro-abrasive wear resistance of the samples. The removal of oxide phases by methanol washing allowed the production, with no sintering additive, of highly densified (93.6% of theoretical density), hard (25.4 GPa), and highly wear resistant (wear coefficient =2.9Ã10-14 m3/N.m) boron carbide compacts sintered at 2250 °C. This optimized combination of properties was a consequence of a reduced grain growth without the deleterious effects associated to the carbon addition. Methanol washing of the starting powder is a simple and general approach to produce, without additives, high quality, wear resistant boron carbide compacts by pressureless sintering.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Ceramics and Composites
Authors
Agueda Maria Turatti, Altair Soria Pereira,