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Silicon carbide ceramics prepared by pulse electric current sintering of β–SiC and α–SiC powders with oxide and nonoxide additives

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 January 2011

You Zhou
Affiliation:
National Industrial Research Institute of Nagoya, Nagoya 462-8510, Japan
Kiyoshi Hirao
Affiliation:
National Industrial Research Institute of Nagoya, Nagoya 462-8510, Japan
Motohiro Toriyama
Affiliation:
National Industrial Research Institute of Nagoya, Nagoya 462-8510, Japan
Hidehiko Tanaka
Affiliation:
National Institute for Research in Inorganic Materials, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-0044, Japan
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Abstract

Using a pulse electric current sintering (PECS) method, β–SiC and α–SiC powders doped with a few weight percent of Al2O3–Y2O3 oxide or Al4C3–B4C–C nonoxide additives were rapidly densified to high densities (95.2–99.7%) within less than 30 min of total processing time. When Al2O3–Y2O3 additive was used, both ceramics resulting from β–SiC and α–SiC had fine, equiaxed microstructures. In contrast, when Al4C3–B4C–C additive was used, the ceramic resulting from α–SiC had a coarse, equiaxed microstructure, whereas the ceramic resulting from β–SiC was composed of large elongated grains whose formation was accompanied by the β →?α phase transformation of SiC. Compared with the Al2O3–Y2O3-doped SiC ceramics, the Al4C3–B4C–C-doped SiC ceramics had higher densities, lower fracture toughness, and higher hardness. The fracture mode of the oxide-doped SiC was mainly intergranular, whereas the nonoxide-doped SiC exhibited almost complete intragranular fracture that was attributed to the higher interfacial bonding strength.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 1999

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