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Sintering

Sintering or frittage is the process of compacting and forming a solid mass of material by pressure[1] or heat[2] without melting it to the point of liquefaction.

Heat and compaction fuse small particles into a dense bulk
Clinker nodules produced by sintering

Sintering happens as part of a manufacturing process used with metals, ceramics, plastics, and other materials. The atoms in the materials diffuse across the boundaries of the particles, fusing the particles together and creating one solid piece. Because the sintering temperature does not have to reach the melting point of the material, sintering is often chosen as the shaping process for materials with extremely high melting points such as tungsten and molybdenum. The study of sintering in metallurgical powder-related processes is known as powder metallurgy. An example of sintering can be observed when ice cubes in a glass of water adhere to each other, which is driven by the temperature difference between the water and the ice. Examples of pressure-driven sintering are the compacting of snowfall to a glacier, or the forming of a hard snowball by pressing loose snow together.

The material produced by sintering is called sinter. The word sinter comes from the Middle High German sinter, a cognate of English cinder.

General sintering

 
Cross section of a sintering tool and the sintered part

Sintering is generally considered successful when the process reduces porosity and enhances properties such as strength, electrical conductivity, translucency and thermal conductivity. In some special cases, sintering is carefully applied to enhance the strength of a material while preserving porosity (e.g. in filters or catalysts, where gas absorbency is a priority). During the firing process, atomic diffusion drives powder surface elimination in different stages, starting at the formation of necks between powders to final elimination of small pores at the end of the process.

The driving force for densification is the change in free energy from the decrease in surface area and lowering of the surface free energy by the replacement of solid-vapor interfaces. It forms new but lower-energy solid-solid interfaces with a net decrease in total free energy. On a microscopic scale, material transfer is affected by the change in pressure and differences in free energy across the curved surface. If the size of the particle is small (and its curvature is high), these effects become very large in magnitude. The change in energy is much higher when the radius of curvature is less than a few micrometers, which is one of the main reasons why much ceramic technology is based on the use of fine-particle materials.[3]

The ratio of bond area to particle size is a determining factor for properties such as strength and electrical conductivity. To yield the desired bond area, temperature and initial grain size are precisely controlled over the sintering process. At steady state, the particle radius and the vapor pressure are proportional to (p0)2/3 and to (p0)1/3, respectively.[3]

The source of power for solid-state processes is the change in free or chemical potential energy between the neck and the surface of the particle. This energy creates a transfer of material through the fastest means possible; if transfer were to take place from the particle volume or the grain boundary between particles, particle count would decrease and pores would be destroyed. Pore elimination is fastest in samples with many pores of uniform size because the boundary diffusion distance is smallest. during the latter portions of the process, boundary and lattice diffusion from the boundary become important.[3]

Control of temperature is very important to the sintering process, since grain-boundary diffusion and volume diffusion rely heavily upon temperature, particle size, particle distribution, material composition, and often other properties of the sintering environment itself.[3]

Ceramic sintering

Sintering is part of the firing process used in the manufacture of pottery and other ceramic objects. These objects are made from substances such as glass, alumina, zirconia, silica, magnesia, lime, beryllium oxide, and ferric oxide. Some ceramic raw materials have a lower affinity for water and a lower plasticity index than clay, requiring organic additives in the stages before sintering. The general procedure of creating ceramic objects via sintering of powders includes:

  • mixing water, binder, deflocculant, and unfired ceramic powder to form a slurry
  • spray-drying the slurry
  • putting the spray dried powder into a mold and pressing it to form a green body (an unsintered ceramic item)
  • heating the green body at low temperature to burn off the binder
  • sintering at a high temperature to fuse the ceramic particles together.

All the characteristic temperatures associated with phase transformation, glass transitions, and melting points, occurring during a sinterisation cycle of a particular ceramics formulation (i.e., tails and frits) can be easily obtained by observing the expansion-temperature curves during optical dilatometer thermal analysis. In fact, sinterisation is associated with a remarkable shrinkage of the material because glass phases flow once their transition temperature is reached, and start consolidating the powdery structure and considerably reducing the porosity of the material.

Sintering is performed at high temperature. Additionally, a second and/or third external force (such as pressure, electrical current) could be used. A commonly used second external force is pressure. Sintering performed by only heating is generally termed "pressureless sintering", which is possible with graded metal-ceramic composites, utilising a nanoparticle sintering aid and bulk molding technology. A variant used for 3D shapes is called hot isostatic pressing.

To allow efficient stacking of product in the furnace during sintering and to prevent parts sticking together, many manufacturers separate ware using ceramic powder separator sheets. These sheets are available in various materials such as alumina, zirconia and magnesia. They are additionally categorized by fine, medium and coarse particle sizes. By matching the material and particle size to the ware being sintered, surface damage and contamination can be reduced while maximizing furnace loading.

Sintering of metallic powders

Most, if not all,[which?] metals can be sintered. This applies especially to pure metals produced in vacuum which suffer no surface contamination. Sintering under atmospheric pressure requires the use of a protective gas, quite often endothermic gas. Sintering, with subsequent reworking, can produce a great range of material properties. Changes in density, alloying, and heat treatments can alter the physical characteristics of various products. For instance, the Young's modulus En of sintered iron powders remains somewhat insensitive to sintering time, alloying, or particle size in the original powder for lower sintering temperatures, but depends upon the density of the final product:

 
where D is the density, E is Young's modulus and d is the maximum density of iron.

Sintering is static when a metal powder under certain external conditions may exhibit coalescence, and yet reverts to its normal behavior when such conditions are removed. In most cases, the density of a collection of grains increases as material flows into voids, causing a decrease in overall volume. Mass movements that occur during sintering consist of the reduction of total porosity by repacking, followed by material transport due to evaporation and condensation from diffusion. In the final stages, metal atoms move along crystal boundaries to the walls of internal pores, redistributing mass from the internal bulk of the object and smoothing pore walls. Surface tension is the driving force for this movement.

A special form of sintering (which is still considered part of powder metallurgy) is liquid-state sintering in which at least one but not all elements are in a liquid state. Liquid-state sintering is required for making cemented carbide and tungsten carbide.

Sintered bronze in particular is frequently used as a material for bearings, since its porosity allows lubricants to flow through it or remain captured within it. Sintered copper may be used as a wicking structure in certain types of heat pipe construction, where the porosity allows a liquid agent to move through the porous material via capillary action. For materials that have high melting points such as molybdenum, tungsten, rhenium, tantalum, osmium and carbon, sintering is one of the few viable manufacturing processes. In these cases, very low porosity is desirable and can often be achieved.

Sintered metal powder is used to make frangible shotgun shells called breaching rounds, as used by military and SWAT teams to quickly force entry into a locked room. These shotgun shells are designed to destroy door deadbolts, locks and hinges without risking lives by ricocheting or by flying on at lethal speed through the door. They work by destroying the object they hit and then dispersing into a relatively harmless powder.

Sintered bronze and stainless steel are used as filter materials in applications requiring high temperature resistance while retaining the ability to regenerate the filter element. For example, sintered stainless steel elements are employed for filtering steam in food and pharmaceutical applications, and sintered bronze in aircraft hydraulic systems.

Sintering of powders containing precious metals such as silver and gold is used to make small jewelry items. Evaporative self-assembly of colloidal silver nanocubes into supercrystals has been shown to allow the sintering of electrical joints at temperatures lower than 200°C.[4]

Advantages

Particular advantages of the powder technology include:

  1. Very high levels of purity and uniformity in starting materials
  2. Preservation of purity, due to the simpler subsequent fabrication process (fewer steps) that it makes possible
  3. Stabilization of the details of repetitive operations, by control of grain size during the input stages
  4. Absence of binding contact between segregated powder particles – or "inclusions" (called stringering) – as often occurs in melting processes
  5. No deformation needed to produce directional elongation of grains
  6. Capability to produce materials of controlled, uniform porosity.
  7. Capability to produce nearly net-shaped objects.
  8. Capability to produce materials which cannot be produced by any other technology.
  9. Capability to fabricate high-strength material like turbine blades.
  10. After sintering the mechanical strength to handling becomes higher.

The literature contains many references on sintering dissimilar materials to produce solid/solid-phase compounds or solid/melt mixtures at the processing stage. Almost any substance can be obtained in powder form, through either chemical, mechanical or physical processes, so basically any material can be obtained through sintering. When pure elements are sintered, the leftover powder is still pure, so it can be recycled.

Disadvantages

Particular disadvantages of the powder technology include:

  1. 100% sintered (iron ore) cannot be charged in the blast furnace[citation needed]
  2. sintering cannot create uniform sizes
  3. micro- and nanostructures produced before sintering are often destroyed.

Plastics sintering

Plastic materials are formed by sintering for applications that require materials of specific porosity. Sintered plastic porous components are used in filtration and to control fluid and gas flows. Sintered plastics are used in applications requiring caustic fluid separation processes such as the nibs in whiteboard markers, inhaler filters, and vents for caps and liners on packaging materials.[5] Sintered ultra high molecular weight polyethylene materials are used as ski and snowboard base materials. The porous texture allows wax to be retained within the structure of the base material, thus providing a more durable wax coating.

Liquid phase sintering

For materials that are difficult to sinter, a process called liquid phase sintering is commonly used. Materials for which liquid phase sintering is common are Si3N4, WC, SiC, and more. Liquid phase sintering is the process of adding an additive to the powder which will melt before the matrix phase. The process of liquid phase sintering has three stages:

  • rearrangement – As the liquid melts capillary action will pull the liquid into pores and also cause grains to rearrange into a more favorable packing arrangement.
  • solution-precipitation – In areas where capillary pressures are high (particles are close together) atoms will preferentially go into solution and then precipitate in areas of lower chemical potential where particles are not close or in contact. This is called contact flattening. This densifies the system in a way similar to grain boundary diffusion in solid state sintering. Ostwald ripening will also occur where smaller particles will go into solution preferentially and precipitate on larger particles leading to densification.
  • final densification – densification of solid skeletal network, liquid movement from efficiently packed regions into pores.

For liquid phase sintering to be practical the major phase should be at least slightly soluble in the liquid phase and the additive should melt before any major sintering of the solid particulate network occurs, otherwise rearrangement of grains will not occur. Liquid phase sintering was successfully applied to improve grain growth of thin semiconductor layers from nanoparticle precursor films.[6]

Electric current assisted sintering

These techniques employ electric currents to drive or enhance sintering.[7][8] English engineer A. G. Bloxam registered in 1906 the first patent on sintering powders using direct current in vacuum. The primary purpose of his inventions was the industrial scale production of filaments for incandescent lamps by compacting tungsten or molybdenum particles. The applied current was particularly effective in reducing surface oxides that increased the emissivity of the filaments.[9]

In 1913, Weintraub and Rush patented a modified sintering method which combined electric current with pressure. The benefits of this method were proved for the sintering of refractory metals as well as conductive carbide or nitride powders. The starting boroncarbon or silicon–carbon powders were placed in an electrically insulating tube and compressed by two rods which also served as electrodes for the current. The estimated sintering temperature was 2000 °C.[9]

In the United States, sintering was first patented by Duval d’Adrian in 1922. His three-step process aimed at producing heat-resistant blocks from such oxide materials as zirconia, thoria or tantalia. The steps were: (i) molding the powder; (ii) annealing it at about 2500 °C to make it conducting; (iii) applying current-pressure sintering as in the method by Weintraub and Rush.[9]

Sintering that uses an arc produced via a capacitance discharge to eliminate oxides before direct current heating, was patented by G. F. Taylor in 1932. This originated sintering methods employing pulsed or alternating current, eventually superimposed to a direct current. Those techniques have been developed over many decades and summarized in more than 640 patents.[9]

Of these technologies the most well known is resistance sintering (also called hot pressing) and spark plasma sintering, while electro sinter forging is the latest advancement in this field.

Spark plasma sintering

In spark plasma sintering (SPS), external pressure and an electric field are applied simultaneously to enhance the densification of the metallic/ceramic powder compacts. However, after commercialization it was determined there is no plasma, so the proper name is spark sintering as coined by Lenel. The electric field driven densification supplements sintering with a form of hot pressing, to enable lower temperatures and taking less time than typical sintering.[10] For a number of years, it was speculated that the existence of sparks or plasma between particles could aid sintering; however, Hulbert and coworkers systematically proved that the electric parameters used during spark plasma sintering make it (highly) unlikely.[11] In light of this, the name "spark plasma sintering" has been rendered obsolete. Terms such as field assisted sintering technique (FAST), electric field assisted sintering (EFAS), and direct current sintering (DCS) have been implemented by the sintering community.[12] Using a direct current (DC) pulse as the electric current, spark plasma, spark impact pressure, joule heating, and an electrical field diffusion effect would be created.[13] By modifying the graphite die design and its assembly, it is possible to perform pressureless sintering in spark plasma sintering facility. This modified die design setup is reported to synergize the advantages of both conventional pressureless sintering and spark plasma sintering techniques.[14]

Electro sinter forging

Electro sinter forging is an electric current assisted sintering (ECAS) technology originated from capacitor discharge sintering. It is used for the production of diamond metal matrix composites and is under evaluation for the production of hard metals,[15] nitinol[16] and other metals and intermetallics. It is characterized by a very low sintering time, allowing machines to sinter at the same speed as a compaction press.

Pressureless sintering

Pressureless sintering is the sintering of a powder compact (sometimes at very high temperatures, depending on the powder) without applied pressure. This avoids density variations in the final component, which occurs with more traditional hot pressing methods.[17]

The powder compact (if a ceramic) can be created by slip casting, injection moulding, and cold isostatic pressing. After presintering, the final green compact can be machined to its final shape before being sintered.

Three different heating schedules can be performed with pressureless sintering: constant-rate of heating (CRH), rate-controlled sintering (RCS), and two-step sintering (TSS). The microstructure and grain size of the ceramics may vary depending on the material and method used.[17]

Constant-rate of heating (CRH), also known as temperature-controlled sintering, consists of heating the green compact at a constant rate up to the sintering temperature.[18] Experiments with zirconia have been performed to optimize the sintering temperature and sintering rate for CRH method. Results showed that the grain sizes were identical when the samples were sintered to the same density, proving that grain size is a function of specimen density rather than CRH temperature mode.

In rate-controlled sintering (RCS), the densification rate in the open-porosity phase is lower than in the CRH method.[18] By definition, the relative density, ρrel, in the open-porosity phase is lower than 90%. Although this should prevent separation of pores from grain boundaries, it has been proven statistically that RCS did not produce smaller grain sizes than CRH for alumina, zirconia, and ceria samples.[17]

Two-step sintering (TSS) uses two different sintering temperatures. The first sintering temperature should guarantee a relative density higher than 75% of theoretical sample density. This will remove supercritical pores from the body. The sample will then be cooled down and held at the second sintering temperature until densification is completed. Grains of cubic zirconia and cubic strontium titanate were significantly refined by TSS compared to CRH. However, the grain size changes in other ceramic materials, like tetragonal zirconia and hexagonal alumina, were not statistically significant.[17]

Microwave sintering

In microwave sintering, heat is sometimes generated internally within the material, rather than via surface radiative heat transfer from an external heat source. Some materials fail to couple and others exhibit run-away behavior, so it is restricted in usefulness. A benefit of microwave sintering is faster heating for small loads, meaning less time is needed to reach the sintering temperature, less heating energy is required and there are improvements in the product properties.[19]

A failing of microwave sintering is that it generally sinters only one compact at a time, so overall productivity turns out to be poor except for situations involving one of a kind sintering, such as for artists. As microwaves can only penetrate a short distance in materials with a high conductivity and a high permeability, microwave sintering requires the sample to be delivered in powders with a particle size around the penetration depth of microwaves in the particular material. The sintering process and side-reactions run several times faster during microwave sintering at the same temperature, which results in different properties for the sintered product.[19]

This technique is acknowledged to be quite effective in maintaining fine grains/nano sized grains in sintered bioceramics. Magnesium phosphates and calcium phosphates are the examples which have been processed through the microwave sintering technique.[20]

Densification, vitrification and grain growth

Sintering in practice is the control of both densification and grain growth. Densification is the act of reducing porosity in a sample, thereby making it denser. Grain growth is the process of grain boundary motion and Ostwald ripening to increase the average grain size. Many properties (mechanical strength, electrical breakdown strength, etc.) benefit from both a high relative density and a small grain size. Therefore, being able to control these properties during processing is of high technical importance. Since densification of powders requires high temperatures, grain growth naturally occurs during sintering. Reduction of this process is key for many engineering ceramics. Under certain conditions of chemistry and orientation, some grains may grow rapidly at the expense of their neighbours during sintering. This phenomenon, known as abnormal grain growth (AGG), results in a bimodal grain size distribution that has consequences for the mechanical, dielectric and thermal performance of the sintered material.

For densification to occur at a quick pace it is essential to have (1) an amount of liquid phase that is large in size, (2) a near complete solubility of the solid in the liquid, and (3) wetting of the solid by the liquid. The power behind the densification is derived from the capillary pressure of the liquid phase located between the fine solid particles. When the liquid phase wets the solid particles, each space between the particles becomes a capillary in which a substantial capillary pressure is developed. For submicrometre particle sizes, capillaries with diameters in the range of 0.1 to 1 micrometres develop pressures in the range of 175 pounds per square inch (1,210 kPa) to 1,750 pounds per square inch (12,100 kPa) for silicate liquids and in the range of 975 pounds per square inch (6,720 kPa) to 9,750 pounds per square inch (67,200 kPa) for a metal such as liquid cobalt.[3]

Densification requires constant capillary pressure where just solution-precipitation material transfer would not produce densification. For further densification, additional particle movement while the particle undergoes grain-growth and grain-shape changes occurs. Shrinkage would result when the liquid slips between particles and increases pressure at points of contact causing the material to move away from the contact areas, forcing particle centers to draw near each other.[3]

The sintering of liquid-phase materials involves a fine-grained solid phase to create the needed capillary pressures proportional to its diameter, and the liquid concentration must also create the required capillary pressure within range, else the process ceases. The vitrification rate is dependent upon the pore size, the viscosity and amount of liquid phase present leading to the viscosity of the overall composition, and the surface tension. Temperature dependence for densification controls the process because at higher temperatures viscosity decreases and increases liquid content. Therefore, when changes to the composition and processing are made, it will affect the vitrification process.[3]

Sintering mechanisms

Sintering occurs by diffusion of atoms through the microstructure. This diffusion is caused by a gradient of chemical potential – atoms move from an area of higher chemical potential to an area of lower chemical potential. The different paths the atoms take to get from one spot to another are the sintering mechanisms. The six common mechanisms are:

  • surface diffusion – diffusion of atoms along the surface of a particle
  • vapor transport – evaporation of atoms which condense on a different surface
  • lattice diffusion from surface – atoms from surface diffuse through lattice
  • lattice diffusion from grain boundary – atom from grain boundary diffuses through lattice
  • grain boundary diffusion – atoms diffuse along grain boundary
  • plastic deformation – dislocation motion causes flow of matter.

Also, one must distinguish between densifying and non-densifying mechanisms. 1–3 above are non-densifying[citation needed] – they take atoms from the surface and rearrange them onto another surface or part of the same surface. These mechanisms simply rearrange matter inside of porosity and do not cause pores to shrink. Mechanisms 4–6 are densifying mechanisms[citation needed] – atoms are moved from the bulk to the surface of pores, thereby eliminating porosity and increasing the density of the sample.

Grain growth

A grain boundary (GB) is the transition area or interface between adjacent crystallites (or grains) of the same chemical and lattice composition, not to be confused with a phase boundary. The adjacent grains do not have the same orientation of the lattice, thus giving the atoms in GB shifted positions relative to the lattice in the crystals. Due to the shifted positioning of the atoms in the GB they have a higher energy state when compared with the atoms in the crystal lattice of the grains. It is this imperfection that makes it possible to selectively etch the GBs when one wants the microstructure to be visible.[21]

Striving to minimize its energy leads to the coarsening of the microstructure to reach a metastable state within the specimen. This involves minimizing its GB area and changing its topological structure to minimize its energy. This grain growth can either be normal or abnormal, a normal grain growth is characterized by the uniform growth and size of all the grains in the specimen. Abnormal grain growth is when a few grains grow much larger than the remaining majority.[22]

Grain boundary energy/tension

The atoms in the GB are normally in a higher energy state than their equivalent in the bulk material. This is due to their more stretched bonds, which gives rise to a GB tension  . This extra energy that the atoms possess is called the grain boundary energy,  . The grain will want to minimize this extra energy, thus striving to make the grain boundary area smaller and this change requires energy.[22]

“Or, in other words, a force has to be applied, in the plane of the grain boundary and acting along a line in the grain-boundary area, in order to extend the grain-boundary area in the direction of the force. The force per unit length, i.e. tension/stress, along the line mentioned is σGB. On the basis of this reasoning it would follow that:

 

with dA as the increase of grain-boundary area per unit length along the line in the grain-boundary area considered.”[22][pg 478]

The GB tension can also be thought of as the attractive forces between the atoms at the surface and the tension between these atoms is due to the fact that there is a larger interatomic distance between them at the surface compared to the bulk (i.e. surface tension). When the surface area becomes bigger the bonds stretch more and the GB tension increases. To counteract this increase in tension there must be a transport of atoms to the surface keeping the GB tension constant. This diffusion of atoms accounts for the constant surface tension in liquids. Then the argument,

 

holds true. For solids, on the other hand, diffusion of atoms to the surface might not be sufficient and the surface tension can vary with an increase in surface area.[23]

For a solid, one can derive an expression for the change in Gibbs free energy, dG, upon the change of GB area, dA. dG is given by

 

which gives

 

  is normally expressed in units of   while   is normally expressed in units of     since they are different physical properties.[22]

Mechanical equilibrium

In a two-dimensional isotropic material the grain boundary tension would be the same for the grains. This would give angle of 120° at GB junction where three grains meet. This would give the structure a hexagonal pattern which is the metastable state (or mechanical equilibrium) of the 2D specimen. A consequence of this is that, to keep trying to be as close to the equilibrium as possible, grains with fewer sides than six will bend the GB to try keep the 120° angle between each other. This results in a curved boundary with its curvature towards itself. A grain with six sides will, as mentioned, have straight boundaries, while a grain with more than six sides will have curved boundaries with its curvature away from itself. A grain with six boundaries (i.e. hexagonal structure) is in a metastable state (i.e. local equilibrium) within the 2D structure.[22] In three dimensions structural details are similar but much more complex and the metastable structure for a grain is a non-regular 14-sided polyhedra with doubly curved faces. In practice all arrays of grains are always unstable and thus always grow until prevented by a counterforce.[24]

Grains strive to minimize their energy, and a curved boundary has a higher energy than a straight boundary. This means that the grain boundary will migrate towards the curvature.[clarification needed] The consequence of this is that grains with less than 6 sides will decrease in size while grains with more than 6 sides will increase in size.[25]

Grain growth occurs due to motion of atoms across a grain boundary. Convex surfaces have a higher chemical potential than concave surfaces, therefore grain boundaries will move toward their center of curvature. As smaller particles tend to have a higher radius of curvature and this results in smaller grains losing atoms to larger grains and shrinking. This is a process called Ostwald ripening. Large grains grow at the expense of small grains.

Grain growth in a simple model is found to follow:

 

Here G is final average grain size, G0 is the initial average grain size, t is time, m is a factor between 2 and 4, and K is a factor given by:

 

Here Q is the molar activation energy, R is the ideal gas constant, T is absolute temperature, and K0 is a material dependent factor. In most materials the sintered grain size is proportion to the inverse square root of the fractional porosity, implying that pores are the most effective retardant for grain growth during sintering.

Reducing grain growth

Solute ions

If a dopant is added to the material (example: Nd in BaTiO3) the impurity will tend to stick to the grain boundaries. As the grain boundary tries to move (as atoms jump from the convex to concave surface) the change in concentration of the dopant at the grain boundary will impose a drag on the boundary. The original concentration of solute around the grain boundary will be asymmetrical in most cases. As the grain boundary tries to move, the concentration on the side opposite of motion will have a higher concentration and therefore have a higher chemical potential. This increased chemical potential will act as a backforce to the original chemical potential gradient that is the reason for grain boundary movement. This decrease in net chemical potential will decrease the grain boundary velocity and therefore grain growth.

Fine second phase particles

If particles of a second phase which are insoluble in the matrix phase are added to the powder in the form of a much finer powder, then this will decrease grain boundary movement. When the grain boundary tries to move past the inclusion diffusion of atoms from one grain to the other, it will be hindered by the insoluble particle. This is because it is beneficial for particles to reside in the grain boundaries and they exert a force in opposite direction compared to grain boundary migration. This effect is called the Zener effect after the man who estimated this drag force to

 
where r is the radius of the particle and λ the interfacial energy of the boundary if there are N particles per unit volume their volume fraction f is
 

assuming they are randomly distributed. A boundary of unit area will intersect all particles within a volume of 2r which is 2Nr particles. So the number of particles n intersecting a unit area of grain boundary is:

 

Now, assuming that the grains only grow due to the influence of curvature, the driving force of growth is   where (for homogeneous grain structure) R approximates to the mean diameter of the grains. With this the critical diameter that has to be reached before the grains ceases to grow:

 
This can be reduced to
 

so the critical diameter of the grains is dependent on the size and volume fraction of the particles at the grain boundaries.[26]

It has also been shown that small bubbles or cavities can act as inclusion

More complicated interactions which slow grain boundary motion include interactions of the surface energies of the two grains and the inclusion and are discussed in detail by C.S. Smith.[27]

Sintering of catalysts

Sintering is an important cause for loss of catalytic activity, especially on supported metal catalysts. It decreases the surface area of the catalyst and changes the surface structure.[28] For a porous catalytic surface, the pores may collapse due to sintering, resulting in loss of surface area. Sintering is in general an irreversible process.[29]

Small catalyst particles have the highest possible relative surface area and high reaction temperature, both factors that generally increase the reactivity of a catalyst. However, these factors are also the circumstances under which sintering occurs.[30] Specific materials may also increase the rate of sintering. On the other hand, by alloying catalysts with other materials, sintering can be reduced. Rare-earth metals in particular have been shown to reduce sintering of metal catalysts when alloyed.[31]

For many supported metal catalysts, sintering starts to become a significant effect at temperatures over 500 °C (932 °F).[28] Catalysts that operate at higher temperatures, such as a car catalyst, use structural improvements to reduce or prevent sintering. These improvements are in general in the form of a support made from an inert and thermally stable material such as silica, carbon or alumina.[32]

See also

References

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  9. ^ a b c d Grasso, S; Sakka, Y; Maizza, G (2009). "Electric current activated/assisted sintering (ECAS): a review of patents 1906–2008". Sci. Technol. Adv. Mater. 10 (5): 053001. doi:10.1088/1468-6996/10/5/053001. PMC 5090538. PMID 27877308.
  10. ^ Tuan, W.H.; Guo, J.K. (2004). Multi-phased ceramic materials: processing and potential. Springer. ISBN 3-540-40516-X.
  11. ^ Hulbert, D. M.; et al. (2008). "The Absence of Plasma in' Spark Plasma Sintering'". Journal of Applied Physics. 104 (3): 033305–033305–7. Bibcode:2008JAP...104c3305H. doi:10.1063/1.2963701. S2CID 54726651.
  12. ^ Anselmi-Tamburini, U. et al. in Sintering: Nanodensification and Field Assisted Processes (Castro, R. & van Benthem, K.) (Springer Verlag, 2012).
  13. ^ Palmer, R.E.; Wilde, G. (December 22, 2008). Mechanical Properties of Nanocomposite Materials. EBL Database: Elsevier Ltd. ISBN 978-0-08-044965-4.
  14. ^ K. Sairam, J.K. Sonber, T.S.R.Ch. Murthy, A.K. Sahu, R.D. Bedse, J.K. Chakravartty (2016). "Pressureless sintering of chromium diboride using spark plasma sintering facility". International Journal of Refractory Metals and Hard Materials. 58: 165–171. doi:10.1016/j.ijrmhm.2016.05.002.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  15. ^ Fais, A. "Discharge sintering of hard metal cutting tools". International Powder Metallurgy Congress and Exhibition, Euro PM 2013
  16. ^ Balagna, Cristina; Fais, Alessandro; Brunelli, Katya; Peruzzo, Luca; Horynová, Miroslava; Čelko, Ladislav; Spriano, Silvia (2016). "Electro-sinter-forged Ni–Ti alloy". Intermetallics. 68: 31–41. doi:10.1016/j.intermet.2015.08.016.
  17. ^ a b c d Maca, Karel (2009). "Microstructure evolution during pressureless sintering of bulk oxide ceramics". Processing and Application of Ceramics. 3 (1–2): 13–17. doi:10.2298/pac0902013m.
  18. ^ a b Maca, Karl; Simonikova, Sarka (2005). "Effect of sintering schedule on grain size of oxide ceramics". Journal of Materials Science. 40 (21): 5581–5589. Bibcode:2005JMatS..40.5581M. doi:10.1007/s10853-005-1332-1. S2CID 137157248.
  19. ^ a b Oghbaei, Morteza; Mirzaee, Omid (2010). "Microwave versus conventional sintering: A review of fundamentals, advantages and applications". Journal of Alloys and Compounds. 494 (1–2): 175–189. doi:10.1016/j.jallcom.2010.01.068.
  20. ^ Babaie, Elham; Ren, Yufu; Bhaduri, Sarit B. (23 March 2016). "Microwave sintering of fine grained MgP and Mg substitutes with amorphous tricalcium phosphate: Structural, and mechanical characterization". Journal of Materials Research. 31 (8): 995–1003. Bibcode:2016JMatR..31..995B. doi:10.1557/jmr.2016.84.
  21. ^ Smallman R. E., Bishop, Ray J (1999). Modern physical metallurgy and materials engineering: science, process, applications. Oxford : Butterworth-Heinemann. ISBN 978-0-7506-4564-5.
  22. ^ a b c d e Mittemeijer, Eric J. (2010). Fundamentals of Materials Science The Microstructure–Property Relationship Using Metals as Model Systems. Springer Heidelberg Dordrecht London New York. pp. 463–496. ISBN 978-3-642-10499-2.
  23. ^ Kang, Suk-Joong L. (2005). Sintering: Densification, Grain Growth, and Microstructure. Elsevier Ltd. pp. 9–18. ISBN 978-0-7506-6385-4.
  24. ^ Cahn, Robert W. and Haasen, Peter (1996). Physical Metallurgy (Fourth ed.). pp. 2399–2500. ISBN 978-0-444-89875-3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  25. ^ Carter, C. Barry; Norton, M. Grant (2007). Ceramic Materials: Science and Engineering. Springer Science+Business Media, LLC. pp. 427–443. ISBN 978-0-387-46270-7.
  26. ^ Cahn, Robert W. and Haasen, Peter (1996). Physical Metallurgy (Fourth ed.). ISBN 978-0-444-89875-3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  27. ^ Smith, Cyril S. (February 1948). "Introduction to Grains, Phases and Interphases: an Introduction to Microstructure". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  28. ^ a b G. Kuczynski (6 December 2012). Sintering and Catalysis. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 978-1-4684-0934-5.
  29. ^ Bartholomew, Calvin H (2001). "Mechanisms of catalyst deactivation". Applied Catalysis A: General. 212 (1–2): 17–60. doi:10.1016/S0926-860X(00)00843-7.
  30. ^ Harris, P (1986). "The sintering of platinum particles in an alumina-supported catalyst: Further transmission electron microscopy studies". Journal of Catalysis. 97 (2): 527–542. doi:10.1016/0021-9517(86)90024-2.
  31. ^ Figueiredo, J. L. (2012). Progress in Catalyst Deactivation: Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Study Institute on Catalyst Deactivation, Algarve, Portugal, May 18–29, 1981. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 11. ISBN 978-94-009-7597-2.
  32. ^ Chorkendorff, I.; Niemantsverdriet, J. W. (6 March 2006). Concepts of Modern Catalysis and Kinetics. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-3-527-60564-4.

Further reading

  • Chiang, Yet-Ming; Birnie, Dunbar P.; Kingery, W. David (May 1996). Physical Ceramics: Principles for Ceramic Science and Engineering. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0-471-59873-9.
  • Green, D.J.; Hannink, R.; Swain, M.V. (1989). Transformation Toughening of Ceramics. Boca Raton: CRC Press. ISBN 0-8493-6594-5.
  • German, R.M. (1996). Sintering Theory and Practice. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. ISBN 0-471-05786-X.
  • Kang, Suk-Joong L. (2005). Sintering (1st ed.). Oxford: Elsevier, Butterworth Heinemann. ISBN 0-7506-6385-5.

External links

  • Particle-Particle-Sintering – a 3D lattice kinetic Monte Carlo simulation
  • Sphere-Plate-Sintering – a 3D lattice kinetic Monte Carlo simulation

sintering, other, uses, sinter, disambiguation, this, article, includes, list, references, related, reading, external, links, sources, remain, unclear, because, lacks, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citatio. For other uses see Sinter disambiguation This article includes a list of references related reading or external links but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Sintering or frittage is the process of compacting and forming a solid mass of material by pressure 1 or heat 2 without melting it to the point of liquefaction Heat and compaction fuse small particles into a dense bulk Clinker nodules produced by sintering Sintering happens as part of a manufacturing process used with metals ceramics plastics and other materials The atoms in the materials diffuse across the boundaries of the particles fusing the particles together and creating one solid piece Because the sintering temperature does not have to reach the melting point of the material sintering is often chosen as the shaping process for materials with extremely high melting points such as tungsten and molybdenum The study of sintering in metallurgical powder related processes is known as powder metallurgy An example of sintering can be observed when ice cubes in a glass of water adhere to each other which is driven by the temperature difference between the water and the ice Examples of pressure driven sintering are the compacting of snowfall to a glacier or the forming of a hard snowball by pressing loose snow together The material produced by sintering is called sinter The word sinter comes from the Middle High German sinter a cognate of English cinder Contents 1 General sintering 2 Ceramic sintering 3 Sintering of metallic powders 3 1 Advantages 3 2 Disadvantages 4 Plastics sintering 5 Liquid phase sintering 6 Electric current assisted sintering 6 1 Spark plasma sintering 6 2 Electro sinter forging 7 Pressureless sintering 8 Microwave sintering 9 Densification vitrification and grain growth 9 1 Sintering mechanisms 9 2 Grain growth 9 2 1 Grain boundary energy tension 9 2 2 Mechanical equilibrium 9 3 Reducing grain growth 10 Sintering of catalysts 11 See also 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksGeneral sintering Edit Cross section of a sintering tool and the sintered part Sintering is generally considered successful when the process reduces porosity and enhances properties such as strength electrical conductivity translucency and thermal conductivity In some special cases sintering is carefully applied to enhance the strength of a material while preserving porosity e g in filters or catalysts where gas absorbency is a priority During the firing process atomic diffusion drives powder surface elimination in different stages starting at the formation of necks between powders to final elimination of small pores at the end of the process The driving force for densification is the change in free energy from the decrease in surface area and lowering of the surface free energy by the replacement of solid vapor interfaces It forms new but lower energy solid solid interfaces with a net decrease in total free energy On a microscopic scale material transfer is affected by the change in pressure and differences in free energy across the curved surface If the size of the particle is small and its curvature is high these effects become very large in magnitude The change in energy is much higher when the radius of curvature is less than a few micrometers which is one of the main reasons why much ceramic technology is based on the use of fine particle materials 3 The ratio of bond area to particle size is a determining factor for properties such as strength and electrical conductivity To yield the desired bond area temperature and initial grain size are precisely controlled over the sintering process At steady state the particle radius and the vapor pressure are proportional to p0 2 3 and to p0 1 3 respectively 3 The source of power for solid state processes is the change in free or chemical potential energy between the neck and the surface of the particle This energy creates a transfer of material through the fastest means possible if transfer were to take place from the particle volume or the grain boundary between particles particle count would decrease and pores would be destroyed Pore elimination is fastest in samples with many pores of uniform size because the boundary diffusion distance is smallest during the latter portions of the process boundary and lattice diffusion from the boundary become important 3 Control of temperature is very important to the sintering process since grain boundary diffusion and volume diffusion rely heavily upon temperature particle size particle distribution material composition and often other properties of the sintering environment itself 3 Ceramic sintering EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Sintering is part of the firing process used in the manufacture of pottery and other ceramic objects These objects are made from substances such as glass alumina zirconia silica magnesia lime beryllium oxide and ferric oxide Some ceramic raw materials have a lower affinity for water and a lower plasticity index than clay requiring organic additives in the stages before sintering The general procedure of creating ceramic objects via sintering of powders includes mixing water binder deflocculant and unfired ceramic powder to form a slurry spray drying the slurry putting the spray dried powder into a mold and pressing it to form a green body an unsintered ceramic item heating the green body at low temperature to burn off the binder sintering at a high temperature to fuse the ceramic particles together All the characteristic temperatures associated with phase transformation glass transitions and melting points occurring during a sinterisation cycle of a particular ceramics formulation i e tails and frits can be easily obtained by observing the expansion temperature curves during optical dilatometer thermal analysis In fact sinterisation is associated with a remarkable shrinkage of the material because glass phases flow once their transition temperature is reached and start consolidating the powdery structure and considerably reducing the porosity of the material Sintering is performed at high temperature Additionally a second and or third external force such as pressure electrical current could be used A commonly used second external force is pressure Sintering performed by only heating is generally termed pressureless sintering which is possible with graded metal ceramic composites utilising a nanoparticle sintering aid and bulk molding technology A variant used for 3D shapes is called hot isostatic pressing To allow efficient stacking of product in the furnace during sintering and to prevent parts sticking together many manufacturers separate ware using ceramic powder separator sheets These sheets are available in various materials such as alumina zirconia and magnesia They are additionally categorized by fine medium and coarse particle sizes By matching the material and particle size to the ware being sintered surface damage and contamination can be reduced while maximizing furnace loading Sintering of metallic powders Edit Iron powder Most if not all which metals can be sintered This applies especially to pure metals produced in vacuum which suffer no surface contamination Sintering under atmospheric pressure requires the use of a protective gas quite often endothermic gas Sintering with subsequent reworking can produce a great range of material properties Changes in density alloying and heat treatments can alter the physical characteristics of various products For instance the Young s modulus En of sintered iron powders remains somewhat insensitive to sintering time alloying or particle size in the original powder for lower sintering temperatures but depends upon the density of the final product E n E D d 3 4 displaystyle E n E D d 3 4 where D is the density E is Young s modulus and d is the maximum density of iron Sintering is static when a metal powder under certain external conditions may exhibit coalescence and yet reverts to its normal behavior when such conditions are removed In most cases the density of a collection of grains increases as material flows into voids causing a decrease in overall volume Mass movements that occur during sintering consist of the reduction of total porosity by repacking followed by material transport due to evaporation and condensation from diffusion In the final stages metal atoms move along crystal boundaries to the walls of internal pores redistributing mass from the internal bulk of the object and smoothing pore walls Surface tension is the driving force for this movement A special form of sintering which is still considered part of powder metallurgy is liquid state sintering in which at least one but not all elements are in a liquid state Liquid state sintering is required for making cemented carbide and tungsten carbide Sintered bronze in particular is frequently used as a material for bearings since its porosity allows lubricants to flow through it or remain captured within it Sintered copper may be used as a wicking structure in certain types of heat pipe construction where the porosity allows a liquid agent to move through the porous material via capillary action For materials that have high melting points such as molybdenum tungsten rhenium tantalum osmium and carbon sintering is one of the few viable manufacturing processes In these cases very low porosity is desirable and can often be achieved Sintered metal powder is used to make frangible shotgun shells called breaching rounds as used by military and SWAT teams to quickly force entry into a locked room These shotgun shells are designed to destroy door deadbolts locks and hinges without risking lives by ricocheting or by flying on at lethal speed through the door They work by destroying the object they hit and then dispersing into a relatively harmless powder Sintered bronze and stainless steel are used as filter materials in applications requiring high temperature resistance while retaining the ability to regenerate the filter element For example sintered stainless steel elements are employed for filtering steam in food and pharmaceutical applications and sintered bronze in aircraft hydraulic systems Sintering of powders containing precious metals such as silver and gold is used to make small jewelry items Evaporative self assembly of colloidal silver nanocubes into supercrystals has been shown to allow the sintering of electrical joints at temperatures lower than 200 C 4 Advantages Edit Particular advantages of the powder technology include Very high levels of purity and uniformity in starting materials Preservation of purity due to the simpler subsequent fabrication process fewer steps that it makes possible Stabilization of the details of repetitive operations by control of grain size during the input stages Absence of binding contact between segregated powder particles or inclusions called stringering as often occurs in melting processes No deformation needed to produce directional elongation of grains Capability to produce materials of controlled uniform porosity Capability to produce nearly net shaped objects Capability to produce materials which cannot be produced by any other technology Capability to fabricate high strength material like turbine blades After sintering the mechanical strength to handling becomes higher The literature contains many references on sintering dissimilar materials to produce solid solid phase compounds or solid melt mixtures at the processing stage Almost any substance can be obtained in powder form through either chemical mechanical or physical processes so basically any material can be obtained through sintering When pure elements are sintered the leftover powder is still pure so it can be recycled Disadvantages Edit Particular disadvantages of the powder technology include 100 sintered iron ore cannot be charged in the blast furnace citation needed sintering cannot create uniform sizes micro and nanostructures produced before sintering are often destroyed Plastics sintering EditPlastic materials are formed by sintering for applications that require materials of specific porosity Sintered plastic porous components are used in filtration and to control fluid and gas flows Sintered plastics are used in applications requiring caustic fluid separation processes such as the nibs in whiteboard markers inhaler filters and vents for caps and liners on packaging materials 5 Sintered ultra high molecular weight polyethylene materials are used as ski and snowboard base materials The porous texture allows wax to be retained within the structure of the base material thus providing a more durable wax coating Liquid phase sintering EditFor materials that are difficult to sinter a process called liquid phase sintering is commonly used Materials for which liquid phase sintering is common are Si3N4 WC SiC and more Liquid phase sintering is the process of adding an additive to the powder which will melt before the matrix phase The process of liquid phase sintering has three stages rearrangement As the liquid melts capillary action will pull the liquid into pores and also cause grains to rearrange into a more favorable packing arrangement solution precipitation In areas where capillary pressures are high particles are close together atoms will preferentially go into solution and then precipitate in areas of lower chemical potential where particles are not close or in contact This is called contact flattening This densifies the system in a way similar to grain boundary diffusion in solid state sintering Ostwald ripening will also occur where smaller particles will go into solution preferentially and precipitate on larger particles leading to densification final densification densification of solid skeletal network liquid movement from efficiently packed regions into pores For liquid phase sintering to be practical the major phase should be at least slightly soluble in the liquid phase and the additive should melt before any major sintering of the solid particulate network occurs otherwise rearrangement of grains will not occur Liquid phase sintering was successfully applied to improve grain growth of thin semiconductor layers from nanoparticle precursor films 6 Electric current assisted sintering EditThese techniques employ electric currents to drive or enhance sintering 7 8 English engineer A G Bloxam registered in 1906 the first patent on sintering powders using direct current in vacuum The primary purpose of his inventions was the industrial scale production of filaments for incandescent lamps by compacting tungsten or molybdenum particles The applied current was particularly effective in reducing surface oxides that increased the emissivity of the filaments 9 In 1913 Weintraub and Rush patented a modified sintering method which combined electric current with pressure The benefits of this method were proved for the sintering of refractory metals as well as conductive carbide or nitride powders The starting boron carbon or silicon carbon powders were placed in an electrically insulating tube and compressed by two rods which also served as electrodes for the current The estimated sintering temperature was 2000 C 9 In the United States sintering was first patented by Duval d Adrian in 1922 His three step process aimed at producing heat resistant blocks from such oxide materials as zirconia thoria or tantalia The steps were i molding the powder ii annealing it at about 2500 C to make it conducting iii applying current pressure sintering as in the method by Weintraub and Rush 9 Sintering that uses an arc produced via a capacitance discharge to eliminate oxides before direct current heating was patented by G F Taylor in 1932 This originated sintering methods employing pulsed or alternating current eventually superimposed to a direct current Those techniques have been developed over many decades and summarized in more than 640 patents 9 Of these technologies the most well known is resistance sintering also called hot pressing and spark plasma sintering while electro sinter forging is the latest advancement in this field Spark plasma sintering Edit In spark plasma sintering SPS external pressure and an electric field are applied simultaneously to enhance the densification of the metallic ceramic powder compacts However after commercialization it was determined there is no plasma so the proper name is spark sintering as coined by Lenel The electric field driven densification supplements sintering with a form of hot pressing to enable lower temperatures and taking less time than typical sintering 10 For a number of years it was speculated that the existence of sparks or plasma between particles could aid sintering however Hulbert and coworkers systematically proved that the electric parameters used during spark plasma sintering make it highly unlikely 11 In light of this the name spark plasma sintering has been rendered obsolete Terms such as field assisted sintering technique FAST electric field assisted sintering EFAS and direct current sintering DCS have been implemented by the sintering community 12 Using a direct current DC pulse as the electric current spark plasma spark impact pressure joule heating and an electrical field diffusion effect would be created 13 By modifying the graphite die design and its assembly it is possible to perform pressureless sintering in spark plasma sintering facility This modified die design setup is reported to synergize the advantages of both conventional pressureless sintering and spark plasma sintering techniques 14 Electro sinter forging Edit Electro sinter forging is an electric current assisted sintering ECAS technology originated from capacitor discharge sintering It is used for the production of diamond metal matrix composites and is under evaluation for the production of hard metals 15 nitinol 16 and other metals and intermetallics It is characterized by a very low sintering time allowing machines to sinter at the same speed as a compaction press Pressureless sintering EditPressureless sintering is the sintering of a powder compact sometimes at very high temperatures depending on the powder without applied pressure This avoids density variations in the final component which occurs with more traditional hot pressing methods 17 The powder compact if a ceramic can be created by slip casting injection moulding and cold isostatic pressing After presintering the final green compact can be machined to its final shape before being sintered Three different heating schedules can be performed with pressureless sintering constant rate of heating CRH rate controlled sintering RCS and two step sintering TSS The microstructure and grain size of the ceramics may vary depending on the material and method used 17 Constant rate of heating CRH also known as temperature controlled sintering consists of heating the green compact at a constant rate up to the sintering temperature 18 Experiments with zirconia have been performed to optimize the sintering temperature and sintering rate for CRH method Results showed that the grain sizes were identical when the samples were sintered to the same density proving that grain size is a function of specimen density rather than CRH temperature mode In rate controlled sintering RCS the densification rate in the open porosity phase is lower than in the CRH method 18 By definition the relative density rrel in the open porosity phase is lower than 90 Although this should prevent separation of pores from grain boundaries it has been proven statistically that RCS did not produce smaller grain sizes than CRH for alumina zirconia and ceria samples 17 Two step sintering TSS uses two different sintering temperatures The first sintering temperature should guarantee a relative density higher than 75 of theoretical sample density This will remove supercritical pores from the body The sample will then be cooled down and held at the second sintering temperature until densification is completed Grains of cubic zirconia and cubic strontium titanate were significantly refined by TSS compared to CRH However the grain size changes in other ceramic materials like tetragonal zirconia and hexagonal alumina were not statistically significant 17 Microwave sintering EditIn microwave sintering heat is sometimes generated internally within the material rather than via surface radiative heat transfer from an external heat source Some materials fail to couple and others exhibit run away behavior so it is restricted in usefulness A benefit of microwave sintering is faster heating for small loads meaning less time is needed to reach the sintering temperature less heating energy is required and there are improvements in the product properties 19 A failing of microwave sintering is that it generally sinters only one compact at a time so overall productivity turns out to be poor except for situations involving one of a kind sintering such as for artists As microwaves can only penetrate a short distance in materials with a high conductivity and a high permeability microwave sintering requires the sample to be delivered in powders with a particle size around the penetration depth of microwaves in the particular material The sintering process and side reactions run several times faster during microwave sintering at the same temperature which results in different properties for the sintered product 19 This technique is acknowledged to be quite effective in maintaining fine grains nano sized grains in sintered bioceramics Magnesium phosphates and calcium phosphates are the examples which have been processed through the microwave sintering technique 20 Densification vitrification and grain growth EditSintering in practice is the control of both densification and grain growth Densification is the act of reducing porosity in a sample thereby making it denser Grain growth is the process of grain boundary motion and Ostwald ripening to increase the average grain size Many properties mechanical strength electrical breakdown strength etc benefit from both a high relative density and a small grain size Therefore being able to control these properties during processing is of high technical importance Since densification of powders requires high temperatures grain growth naturally occurs during sintering Reduction of this process is key for many engineering ceramics Under certain conditions of chemistry and orientation some grains may grow rapidly at the expense of their neighbours during sintering This phenomenon known as abnormal grain growth AGG results in a bimodal grain size distribution that has consequences for the mechanical dielectric and thermal performance of the sintered material For densification to occur at a quick pace it is essential to have 1 an amount of liquid phase that is large in size 2 a near complete solubility of the solid in the liquid and 3 wetting of the solid by the liquid The power behind the densification is derived from the capillary pressure of the liquid phase located between the fine solid particles When the liquid phase wets the solid particles each space between the particles becomes a capillary in which a substantial capillary pressure is developed For submicrometre particle sizes capillaries with diameters in the range of 0 1 to 1 micrometres develop pressures in the range of 175 pounds per square inch 1 210 kPa to 1 750 pounds per square inch 12 100 kPa for silicate liquids and in the range of 975 pounds per square inch 6 720 kPa to 9 750 pounds per square inch 67 200 kPa for a metal such as liquid cobalt 3 Densification requires constant capillary pressure where just solution precipitation material transfer would not produce densification For further densification additional particle movement while the particle undergoes grain growth and grain shape changes occurs Shrinkage would result when the liquid slips between particles and increases pressure at points of contact causing the material to move away from the contact areas forcing particle centers to draw near each other 3 The sintering of liquid phase materials involves a fine grained solid phase to create the needed capillary pressures proportional to its diameter and the liquid concentration must also create the required capillary pressure within range else the process ceases The vitrification rate is dependent upon the pore size the viscosity and amount of liquid phase present leading to the viscosity of the overall composition and the surface tension Temperature dependence for densification controls the process because at higher temperatures viscosity decreases and increases liquid content Therefore when changes to the composition and processing are made it will affect the vitrification process 3 Sintering mechanisms Edit Sintering occurs by diffusion of atoms through the microstructure This diffusion is caused by a gradient of chemical potential atoms move from an area of higher chemical potential to an area of lower chemical potential The different paths the atoms take to get from one spot to another are the sintering mechanisms The six common mechanisms are surface diffusion diffusion of atoms along the surface of a particle vapor transport evaporation of atoms which condense on a different surface lattice diffusion from surface atoms from surface diffuse through lattice lattice diffusion from grain boundary atom from grain boundary diffuses through lattice grain boundary diffusion atoms diffuse along grain boundary plastic deformation dislocation motion causes flow of matter Also one must distinguish between densifying and non densifying mechanisms 1 3 above are non densifying citation needed they take atoms from the surface and rearrange them onto another surface or part of the same surface These mechanisms simply rearrange matter inside of porosity and do not cause pores to shrink Mechanisms 4 6 are densifying mechanisms citation needed atoms are moved from the bulk to the surface of pores thereby eliminating porosity and increasing the density of the sample Grain growth Edit Main article Grain growth A grain boundary GB is the transition area or interface between adjacent crystallites or grains of the same chemical and lattice composition not to be confused with a phase boundary The adjacent grains do not have the same orientation of the lattice thus giving the atoms in GB shifted positions relative to the lattice in the crystals Due to the shifted positioning of the atoms in the GB they have a higher energy state when compared with the atoms in the crystal lattice of the grains It is this imperfection that makes it possible to selectively etch the GBs when one wants the microstructure to be visible 21 Striving to minimize its energy leads to the coarsening of the microstructure to reach a metastable state within the specimen This involves minimizing its GB area and changing its topological structure to minimize its energy This grain growth can either be normal or abnormal a normal grain growth is characterized by the uniform growth and size of all the grains in the specimen Abnormal grain growth is when a few grains grow much larger than the remaining majority 22 Grain boundary energy tension Edit The atoms in the GB are normally in a higher energy state than their equivalent in the bulk material This is due to their more stretched bonds which gives rise to a GB tension s G B displaystyle sigma GB This extra energy that the atoms possess is called the grain boundary energy g G B displaystyle gamma GB The grain will want to minimize this extra energy thus striving to make the grain boundary area smaller and this change requires energy 22 Or in other words a force has to be applied in the plane of the grain boundary and acting along a line in the grain boundary area in order to extend the grain boundary area in the direction of the force The force per unit length i e tension stress along the line mentioned is sGB On the basis of this reasoning it would follow that s G B d A work done g G B d A energy change displaystyle sigma GB dA text work done gamma GB dA text energy change with dA as the increase of grain boundary area per unit length along the line in the grain boundary area considered 22 pg 478 The GB tension can also be thought of as the attractive forces between the atoms at the surface and the tension between these atoms is due to the fact that there is a larger interatomic distance between them at the surface compared to the bulk i e surface tension When the surface area becomes bigger the bonds stretch more and the GB tension increases To counteract this increase in tension there must be a transport of atoms to the surface keeping the GB tension constant This diffusion of atoms accounts for the constant surface tension in liquids Then the argument s G B d A work done g G B d A energy change displaystyle sigma GB dA text work done gamma GB dA text energy change holds true For solids on the other hand diffusion of atoms to the surface might not be sufficient and the surface tension can vary with an increase in surface area 23 For a solid one can derive an expression for the change in Gibbs free energy dG upon the change of GB area dA dG is given bys G B d A work done d G energy change g G B d A A d g G B displaystyle sigma GB dA text work done dG text energy change gamma GB dA Ad gamma GB which givess G B g G B A d g G B d A displaystyle sigma GB gamma GB frac Ad gamma GB dA s G B displaystyle sigma GB is normally expressed in units of N m displaystyle frac N m while g G B displaystyle gamma GB is normally expressed in units of J m 2 displaystyle frac J m 2 J N m displaystyle J Nm since they are different physical properties 22 Mechanical equilibrium Edit In a two dimensional isotropic material the grain boundary tension would be the same for the grains This would give angle of 120 at GB junction where three grains meet This would give the structure a hexagonal pattern which is the metastable state or mechanical equilibrium of the 2D specimen A consequence of this is that to keep trying to be as close to the equilibrium as possible grains with fewer sides than six will bend the GB to try keep the 120 angle between each other This results in a curved boundary with its curvature towards itself A grain with six sides will as mentioned have straight boundaries while a grain with more than six sides will have curved boundaries with its curvature away from itself A grain with six boundaries i e hexagonal structure is in a metastable state i e local equilibrium within the 2D structure 22 In three dimensions structural details are similar but much more complex and the metastable structure for a grain is a non regular 14 sided polyhedra with doubly curved faces In practice all arrays of grains are always unstable and thus always grow until prevented by a counterforce 24 Grains strive to minimize their energy and a curved boundary has a higher energy than a straight boundary This means that the grain boundary will migrate towards the curvature clarification needed The consequence of this is that grains with less than 6 sides will decrease in size while grains with more than 6 sides will increase in size 25 Grain growth occurs due to motion of atoms across a grain boundary Convex surfaces have a higher chemical potential than concave surfaces therefore grain boundaries will move toward their center of curvature As smaller particles tend to have a higher radius of curvature and this results in smaller grains losing atoms to larger grains and shrinking This is a process called Ostwald ripening Large grains grow at the expense of small grains Grain growth in a simple model is found to follow G m G 0 m K t displaystyle G m G 0 m Kt Here G is final average grain size G0 is the initial average grain size t is time m is a factor between 2 and 4 and K is a factor given by K K 0 e Q R T displaystyle K K 0 e frac Q RT Here Q is the molar activation energy R is the ideal gas constant T is absolute temperature and K0 is a material dependent factor In most materials the sintered grain size is proportion to the inverse square root of the fractional porosity implying that pores are the most effective retardant for grain growth during sintering Reducing grain growth Edit Solute ionsIf a dopant is added to the material example Nd in BaTiO3 the impurity will tend to stick to the grain boundaries As the grain boundary tries to move as atoms jump from the convex to concave surface the change in concentration of the dopant at the grain boundary will impose a drag on the boundary The original concentration of solute around the grain boundary will be asymmetrical in most cases As the grain boundary tries to move the concentration on the side opposite of motion will have a higher concentration and therefore have a higher chemical potential This increased chemical potential will act as a backforce to the original chemical potential gradient that is the reason for grain boundary movement This decrease in net chemical potential will decrease the grain boundary velocity and therefore grain growth Fine second phase particlesIf particles of a second phase which are insoluble in the matrix phase are added to the powder in the form of a much finer powder then this will decrease grain boundary movement When the grain boundary tries to move past the inclusion diffusion of atoms from one grain to the other it will be hindered by the insoluble particle This is because it is beneficial for particles to reside in the grain boundaries and they exert a force in opposite direction compared to grain boundary migration This effect is called the Zener effect after the man who estimated this drag force toF p r l sin 2 8 displaystyle F pi r lambda sin 2 theta where r is the radius of the particle and l the interfacial energy of the boundary if there are N particles per unit volume their volume fraction f is f 4 3 p r 3 N displaystyle f frac 4 3 pi r 3 N assuming they are randomly distributed A boundary of unit area will intersect all particles within a volume of 2r which is 2Nr particles So the number of particles n intersecting a unit area of grain boundary is n 3 f 2 p r 2 displaystyle n frac 3f 2 pi r 2 Now assuming that the grains only grow due to the influence of curvature the driving force of growth is 2 l R displaystyle frac 2 lambda R where for homogeneous grain structure R approximates to the mean diameter of the grains With this the critical diameter that has to be reached before the grains ceases to grow n F m a x 2 l D c r i t displaystyle nF max frac 2 lambda D crit This can be reduced to D c r i t 4 r 3 f displaystyle D crit frac 4r 3f so the critical diameter of the grains is dependent on the size and volume fraction of the particles at the grain boundaries 26 It has also been shown that small bubbles or cavities can act as inclusionMore complicated interactions which slow grain boundary motion include interactions of the surface energies of the two grains and the inclusion and are discussed in detail by C S Smith 27 Sintering of catalysts EditSintering is an important cause for loss of catalytic activity especially on supported metal catalysts It decreases the surface area of the catalyst and changes the surface structure 28 For a porous catalytic surface the pores may collapse due to sintering resulting in loss of surface area Sintering is in general an irreversible process 29 Small catalyst particles have the highest possible relative surface area and high reaction temperature both factors that generally increase the reactivity of a catalyst However these factors are also the circumstances under which sintering occurs 30 Specific materials may also increase the rate of sintering On the other hand by alloying catalysts with other materials sintering can be reduced Rare earth metals in particular have been shown to reduce sintering of metal catalysts when alloyed 31 For many supported metal catalysts sintering starts to become a significant effect at temperatures over 500 C 932 F 28 Catalysts that operate at higher temperatures such as a car catalyst use structural improvements to reduce or prevent sintering These improvements are in general in the form of a support made from an inert and thermally stable material such as silica carbon or alumina 32 See also EditAbnormal grain growth materials science phenomenonPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Capacitor discharge sintering Fast electric current assisted sintering process Ceramic engineering Science and technology of creating objects from inorganic non metallic materials Direct metal laser sintering 3D printing techniquePages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Energetically modified cement Class of cements mechanically processed to transform reactivity Frit Fused quenched and granulated ceramic High temperature superconductivity Superconductive behavior at temperatures much higher than absolute zero Metal clay Craft material of metal particles and a plastic binder Room temperature densification method method used for the fabrication of Li2MoO4 ceramics instead of conventional thermal sinteringPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Selective laser sintering 3D printing technique a rapid prototyping technology that includes Direct Metal Laser Sintering DMLS Spark plasma sintering sintering techniquePages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback W David Kingery Ceramic engineer a pioneer of sintering methods Yttria stabilized zirconia Ceramic with room temperature stable cubic crystal structureReferences Edit Meaning of sintered The Free Dictionary Retrieved May 1 2014 Definition of sinter Merriam Webster Retrieved 2022 10 11 a b c d e f g Kingery W David Bowen H K Uhlmann Donald R April 1976 Introduction to Ceramics 2nd ed John Wiley amp Sons Academic Press ISBN 0 471 47860 1 Bronchy M Roach L Mendizabal L Feautrier C Durand E Heintz J M Duguet E Treguer Delapierre M 18 January 2022 Improved Low Temperature Sinter Bonding Using Silver Nanocube Superlattices J Phys Chem C 126 3 1644 1650 doi 10 1021 acs jpcc 1c09125 eISSN 1932 7455 ISSN 1932 7447 Porex Custom Plastics Porous Plastics amp Porous Polymers www porex com Retrieved 2017 03 23 Uhl A R et al 2014 Liquid selenium enhanced grain growth of nanoparticle precursor layers for CuInSe2 solar cell absorbers Progress in Photovoltaics Research and Applications 23 9 1110 1119 doi 10 1002 pip 2529 S2CID 97768071 Orru Roberto Licheri Roberta Locci Antonio Mario Cincotti Alberto Cao Giacomo February 2009 Consolidation synthesis of materials by electric current activated assisted sintering Materials Science and Engineering R Reports 63 4 6 127 287 doi 10 1016 j mser 2008 09 003 Grasso Salvatore Sakka Yoshio Maizza Giovanni October 2009 Electric current activated assisted sintering ECAS a review of patents 1906 2008 Science and Technology of Advanced Materials 10 5 053001 doi 10 1088 1468 6996 10 5 053001 ISSN 1468 6996 PMC 5090538 PMID 27877308 a b c d Grasso S Sakka Y Maizza G 2009 Electric current activated assisted sintering ECAS a review of patents 1906 2008 Sci Technol Adv Mater 10 5 053001 doi 10 1088 1468 6996 10 5 053001 PMC 5090538 PMID 27877308 Tuan W H Guo J K 2004 Multi phased ceramic materials processing and potential Springer ISBN 3 540 40516 X Hulbert D M et al 2008 The Absence of Plasma in Spark Plasma Sintering Journal of Applied Physics 104 3 033305 033305 7 Bibcode 2008JAP 104c3305H doi 10 1063 1 2963701 S2CID 54726651 Anselmi Tamburini U et al in Sintering Nanodensification and Field Assisted Processes Castro R amp van Benthem K Springer Verlag 2012 Palmer R E Wilde G December 22 2008 Mechanical Properties of Nanocomposite Materials EBL Database Elsevier Ltd ISBN 978 0 08 044965 4 K Sairam J K Sonber T S R Ch Murthy A K Sahu R D Bedse J K Chakravartty 2016 Pressureless sintering of chromium diboride using spark plasma sintering facility International Journal of Refractory Metals and Hard Materials 58 165 171 doi 10 1016 j ijrmhm 2016 05 002 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Fais A Discharge sintering of hard metal cutting tools International Powder Metallurgy Congress and Exhibition Euro PM 2013 Balagna Cristina Fais Alessandro Brunelli Katya Peruzzo Luca Horynova Miroslava Celko Ladislav Spriano Silvia 2016 Electro sinter forged Ni Ti alloy Intermetallics 68 31 41 doi 10 1016 j intermet 2015 08 016 a b c d Maca Karel 2009 Microstructure evolution during pressureless sintering of bulk oxide ceramics Processing and Application of Ceramics 3 1 2 13 17 doi 10 2298 pac0902013m a b Maca Karl Simonikova Sarka 2005 Effect of sintering schedule on grain size of oxide ceramics Journal of Materials Science 40 21 5581 5589 Bibcode 2005JMatS 40 5581M doi 10 1007 s10853 005 1332 1 S2CID 137157248 a b Oghbaei Morteza Mirzaee Omid 2010 Microwave versus conventional sintering A review of fundamentals advantages and applications Journal of Alloys and Compounds 494 1 2 175 189 doi 10 1016 j jallcom 2010 01 068 Babaie Elham Ren Yufu Bhaduri Sarit B 23 March 2016 Microwave sintering of fine grained MgP and Mg substitutes with amorphous tricalcium phosphate Structural and mechanical characterization Journal of Materials Research 31 8 995 1003 Bibcode 2016JMatR 31 995B doi 10 1557 jmr 2016 84 Smallman R E Bishop Ray J 1999 Modern physical metallurgy and materials engineering science process applications Oxford Butterworth Heinemann ISBN 978 0 7506 4564 5 a b c d e Mittemeijer Eric J 2010 Fundamentals of Materials Science The Microstructure Property Relationship Using Metals as Model Systems Springer Heidelberg Dordrecht London New York pp 463 496 ISBN 978 3 642 10499 2 Kang Suk Joong L 2005 Sintering Densification Grain Growth and Microstructure Elsevier Ltd pp 9 18 ISBN 978 0 7506 6385 4 Cahn Robert W and Haasen Peter 1996 Physical Metallurgy Fourth ed pp 2399 2500 ISBN 978 0 444 89875 3 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Carter C Barry Norton M Grant 2007 Ceramic Materials Science and Engineering Springer Science Business Media LLC pp 427 443 ISBN 978 0 387 46270 7 Cahn Robert W and Haasen Peter 1996 Physical Metallurgy Fourth ed ISBN 978 0 444 89875 3 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Smith Cyril S February 1948 Introduction to Grains Phases and Interphases an Introduction to Microstructure a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b G Kuczynski 6 December 2012 Sintering and Catalysis Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 978 1 4684 0934 5 Bartholomew Calvin H 2001 Mechanisms of catalyst deactivation Applied Catalysis A General 212 1 2 17 60 doi 10 1016 S0926 860X 00 00843 7 Harris P 1986 The sintering of platinum particles in an alumina supported catalyst Further transmission electron microscopy studies Journal of Catalysis 97 2 527 542 doi 10 1016 0021 9517 86 90024 2 Figueiredo J L 2012 Progress in Catalyst Deactivation Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Study Institute on Catalyst Deactivation Algarve Portugal May 18 29 1981 Springer Science amp Business Media p 11 ISBN 978 94 009 7597 2 Chorkendorff I Niemantsverdriet J W 6 March 2006 Concepts of Modern Catalysis and Kinetics John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 3 527 60564 4 Further reading EditChiang Yet Ming Birnie Dunbar P Kingery W David May 1996 Physical Ceramics Principles for Ceramic Science and Engineering John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 0 471 59873 9 Green D J Hannink R Swain M V 1989 Transformation Toughening of Ceramics Boca Raton CRC Press ISBN 0 8493 6594 5 German R M 1996 Sintering Theory and Practice John Wiley amp Sons Inc ISBN 0 471 05786 X Kang Suk Joong L 2005 Sintering 1st ed Oxford Elsevier Butterworth Heinemann ISBN 0 7506 6385 5 External links Edit Look up sintering in Wiktionary the free dictionary Particle Particle Sintering a 3D lattice kinetic Monte Carlo simulation Sphere Plate Sintering a 3D lattice kinetic Monte Carlo simulation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sintering amp oldid 1127717279, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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