Publication | Closed Access
Determination of Critical Concentrations of Silica and/or Calcia for Abnormal Grain Growth in Alumina
180
Citations
10
References
1993
Year
Materials ScienceSinteringPowder MetallurgyEngineeringAbnormal Grain GrowthCeramic MaterialCritical ConcentrationsApplied PhysicsCeramic TechnologyCeramics MaterialsPure AluminaSolubility LimitsCalcium AluminateCeramic PowdersMineral ProcessingMicrostructureGrain Storage
Minimum amounts of SiO 2 and CaO required for inducing abnormal grain growth in alumina were determined using ultrapure alumina (>99.999%) and sintering at 1900°C for 1 h in a contamination‐free condition. The critical concentrations of silicon in cationic mole fractions in alumina were 300 ppm without calcium, 200 ppm with 10 ppm calcium, and 150 ppm with 20 ppm calcium. The critical concentration of calcium alone was 30 ppm. These concentrations seemed to match approximately the solubility limits reported in the literature, which suggested that the abnormal grain growth in commercially pure alumina was indeed related with the formation of a small amount of liquid phase during sintering.
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