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Processing & Testing Electroceramics

Processing & Testing Electroceramics. EBB 443-Technical Ceramics Dr. Sabar D. Hutagalung School of Materials and Mineral Resources Engineering Universiti Sains Malaysia. Processing of Electroceramics.

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Processing & Testing Electroceramics

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  1. Processing & Testing Electroceramics EBB 443-Technical Ceramics Dr. Sabar D. Hutagalung School of Materials and Mineral Resources Engineering Universiti Sains Malaysia

  2. Processing of Electroceramics • The properties of electroceramic components greatly depend upon the processing conditions of the ceramic. • The raw materials are first weighed according to the stoichiometric formula. • The raw materials should be of high purity. • The particle size of the powders must be in the submicron range for the solid phase reactions to occur by atomic diffusion. • The powders are then mixed either mechanically or chemically. • Mechanical mixing is usually done by either ball milling or attrition milling for a short time.

  3. Processing of Electroceramics • During the calcination step the solid phase reaction takes place between the constituents giving the electroceramic phase. • The calcining temperature is important as it influences the density and hence the electromechanical properties of the final product. • The higher the calcining temperature, the higher the homogeneity and density of the final ceramic product.

  4. Processing of Electroceramics • After calcining, the lumps are ground by milling. • The green bodies should have a certain minimum density before they can be sintered. • The desired shape and a minimum green density can be provided by various techniques including powder compaction, slip-casting, and extrusion. • The choice of the method depends on the type of powder used, particle size distribution, state of agglomeration, desired shape, and thickness of the part. • After shaping, the green bodies are heated very slowly in order to remove any binder present.

  5. Processing of Electroceramics • The binder burnout rate should be  1-2 ° C/min in order to allow the gases to come out slowly without forming cracks and blisters in the ceramic part. • After the binder burnout is over, the samples are taken to a higher temperature for sintering to take place. • The sintering temperature and time should be optimum for proper densification to occur without abnormal grain growth. • The sintering of oxide ceramics must be carried out in an oxidizing atmosphere or in air.

  6. Solid State Reaction • The above technique is refer as a solid state reaction or conventional method. • In briefly, the steps including: • Mixing or milling (dry or wet milling) • Calcination • Compaction (for pellet formation) • Sintering

  7. Example: Solid State Reaction of CCTO XRD Analysis (calcined powders) Ball milling 1 hour of a stoichiometric ratio of raw materials (CaCO3, CuO & TiO2) Calcination 900 oC/12 hrs. Compaction with pressure 300 MPa (thickness ~0.5-1.0 mm) Sintering at 1050 oC for 12 hrs. Dielectric measurement by using LCR meter Sintered sample with silver electrodes XRD Analysis (sintered pellets)

  8. Processesing of Magnetic Ceramics Production scheme of ‘Nd2Fe14B-type’ magnets (REM XIII, 1994 p 303)

  9. Processing of ferroelectric ceramics Flowchart for the processing of ferroelectric ceramics

  10. Processing of ferroelectric ceramics • The dipoles within a single domain have the same orientation. • In ferroelectric ceramics with fine grain sizes (< 1 mm) each grain is a single domain with the domain wall at the grain boundary. • If the grain size is larger (> 1 mm) then there could be multiple domains in a single grain.

  11. Processing of ferroelectric ceramics • Piezoelectric behavior can be induced in a ferroelectric ceramic by a process called "poling". • In this process a direct current (dc) electric field with a strength larger than the coercive field strength is applied to the ferroelectric ceramic at a high temperature, but below the Curie point. • On the application of the external dc field the spontaneous polarization within each grain gets orientated towards the direction of the applied field.

  12. Processing of ferroelectric ceramics Schematic of the poling process in piezoelectric ceramics: (a) In the absence of electric field the domains have random orientation of polarization; (b) the polarization within the domains aligns in the direction of the applied field.

  13. Slip Casting Method

  14. In a typical experiment, a solid mixture containing requisite quantities of aluminum nitrate, magnesium nitrate, and urea was taken in a Pyrex glass dish and was irradiated with microwaves in a modified domestic microwave oven (Microwave 700W, input range 210–230 V-ac 50 Hz, microwave frequency 2.45 GHz) to produce MgAl2O4 spinel material. Modified domestic microwave oven used for the powder synthesis.

  15. MW Irradiation? • In conventional or surface heating, the heat flow rate into the body from the surface determined by its specific heat, thermal conductivity, density and viscosity. • Surface heating is not only slow, but also non-uniform with the surfaces being much hotter than the inside of the material. • Consequently, the quality of conventionally heated materials is variable and frequently inferior to the desired result.

  16. 1050 oC/4 h 1050 oC/24 h

  17. MW Irradiation? • Conversely, with microwaves, it is possible to heat the volume of a material at the same rate. • Energy is transferred through the material electro-magnetically, not as a thermal heat flux. • Therefore, the rate of heating is not limited and the uniformity of heat distribution is greatly improved. • Heating times can be reduced to a very short time.

  18. Methodology MW kitchen oven (2.45 GHz, 1.1 kW). XRD analysis (calcined powder) Ball milling 5 h of stoichiometric ratio of CaCO3, CuO, TiO2. MW irradiation 30-90 min Compaction , 520 MPa (d ~1.2-1.5 mm, Ø 5 & 12 mm) MW sintering 60 min Dielectric measurement Post-MW sintered 30-150 min Sintering at 1000oC/10h Samples with silver electrodes SEM analysis (surface & fracture)

  19. Domestic MW oven (2.45 GHz, 1.1 kW) Susceptor/Crucible Alumina SiC/graphite

  20. Sol-Gel Processing

  21. Sol-Gel Processing: Basic Reactions

  22. Sol-Gel: Steps of film formation

  23. Sol-Gel: Stability of sols

  24. Unique structures by sol-gel

  25. Sol-Gel: Multilayer

  26. Ceramic sol-gel films

  27. Testing XRD analysis (calcined powder) Ball milling 5 h of stoichiometric ratio of CaCO3, CuO, TiO2. MW irradiation 30-90 min Compaction , 520 MPa (d ~1.2-1.5 mm, Ø 5 & 12 mm) MW sintering 60 min Dielectric measurement XRD analysis (sintered sample) Sintered pellet Samples with silver electrodes SEM analysis (surface & fracture)

  28. Dielectric Testing

  29. Dielectric Testing

  30. Piezoelectric Measurement • PIEZO software takes input on the Multichannel fromdisplacement or force sensors to collect piezoelectricproperties simultaneously with electric properties.

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