Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9796253 | Materials Science and Engineering: A | 2005 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
ZrO2/Ni1âxO (1:9 in molar ratio) composites were sintered and then annealed at 1650 °C for 24 and 100 h in air to study Ni1âxO surface-controlled reorientation of the tetragonal (t-) ZrO2 particles, which transformed into monoclinic (m-) twin variants upon cooling. Transmission electron microscopy indicated that the ZrO2 particles fell into three topotaxial relationships with respect to the host Ni1âxO grains: (1) parallel topotaxy, (2) “eutectic” topotaxy, i.e. [1 0 0]Z//[1 1 1]N, [0 1 0]Z//[01¯1]N and (3) “occasional” topotaxy [1 0 0]Z//[1 1 1]N, [011¯]Z//[01¯1]N. The parallel topotaxy has a beneficial low energy for the family of {1 0 0}Z,N and {1 1 1}Z,N interfaces. The change from the occasional topotaxy to an energetically more favorable eutectic topotaxy was likely achieved by a rotation of the ZrO2 particles over a specific (1 0 0)Z/(1 1 1)N interface. Brownian-type rotation is probable for the embedded t-ZrO2 particles in terms of anchorage release at the interphase interface with the Ni1âxO host. Detachment or bypassing of grain boundaries could also cause reorientation and shape change of intergranular ZrO2 particles.
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Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Materials Science (General)
Authors
Ming-Yen Li, Pouyan Shen,