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Showing papers by "Nijhuma Kayal published in 2020"




Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the effects of clay contents on in situ reaction bonding of SiC, phase development, microstructure, porosity and mechanical properties of porous SiC ceramics are compared.

5 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of alumina, sintering temperature and other sinterings aids on material properties such as porosity/pore size distribution mechanical and micro structural properties of porous oxide-bonded SiC ceramics were studied.
Abstract: Currently, porous SiC ceramics have been a focus of interesting research in the field of porous materials due to their excellent structural properties, high strength, high hardness, and superb mechanical and chemical stabilities even at high temperatures and hostile atmospheres. Porous SiC ceramics have been considered as suitable candidate materials for catalyst supports [1-2], hot gas or molten metal filters [3], high temperature membrane reactors [4], thermal insulating materials [5], gas sensors [6] etc. Porous SiC ceramics are fabricated by various methods including partial sintering [7], carbothermal reduction [8-9], replication or pyrolysis of polymeric sponge [10-12], reaction bonding [13] etc. In all these methods SiC needs to be sintered which requires a very high temperature due to the strong covalent nature of the Si-C bond, selective sintering additives, expensive atmosphere, costly and delicate instrumentation. Processing of porous SiC ceramics at low temperature using a simple technique thus becomes necessary. Bonding of SiC can be done at low temperatures by use of different oxide and non-oxide secondary phases. They include silica, mullite, cordierite, silicon nitride, etc. Various sintering additives are used for the formation of variety of secondary oxide bond phases for formations for porous SiC [14-19] Choice of mullite as a bond for SiC has many advantages. Mullite possesses a high melting point (Tm= 1850°C) and a low oxygen diffusion coefficient (5.6 x 10-14 m2/sec at 50°C). It has a matching thermal expansion coefficient with SiC (CTEmullite= 5.3 ×10-6/K; CTESiC = 4.7 ×10-6/K at RT-1000 °C) and a high strength that can be retained up to a very high temperature. Different sources of aluminum, such as Al2O3, Al, AlN, and Al (OH)3 powders were used for the formation of mullite bonded porous SiC ceramics (MBSC) [20-21]. However, the mullitization temperature of 1550o C is still necessary. In this work, mullite bonded porous SiC ceramics were fabricated by an in situ reaction-bonding process; the mixture of clay and CaCO3 were chosen as sintering additives to lower the mullitization reaction between Al2O3 and oxidation-derived SiO2. The effect amount of alumina, sintering temperature and other sintering aids on material property such as porosity/pore size distribution mechanical and micro structural properties of porous oxide bonded SiC ceramics were studied.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the phase distribution of the final Si-Mo-SiC composite determined by scanning electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction technique was determined using a Vicker's micro-hardness tester.