Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7885975 | Ceramics International | 2018 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
Nanocrystalline nickel oxide (NiO) was prepared from nickel hydroxide by Spark plasma sintering (SPS) and the mechanisms involved in the densification of NiO were studied. Reverse precipitated nickel hydroxide powders were SPS processed at 400, 600 and 700â¯Â°C with 70â¯MPa pressure. Pure NiO with 12â¯nm crystallite size formed after 400â¯Â°C sintering process. However NiO grains had grown to 18 and 38â¯nm after 600 and 700â¯Â°C sintering respectively. NiO pellets prepared using 600 and 700â¯Â°C SPS sintering schedules had relative densities of 83% and 94% respectively. Two displacement rate regimes were observed during densification of NiO in both 600 and 700â¯Â°C sintering processes. Decomposition of nickel hydroxide and particle sliding of NiO led to first displacement rate maximum while inverse Hall-Petch based plastic deformation facilitated densification during the constant second displacement rate regime. No densification occurred during sintering holding times indicating the limited role that diffusion played during densification.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Ceramics and Composites
Authors
Mohan B. Ponnuchamy, G. Mohan Muralikrishna, Venkateswara Rao Mannava, G. Srinivas Reddy,