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Journal ArticleDOI

Consolidation/synthesis of materials by electric current activated/assisted sintering

TLDR
In this paper, the authors provide an updated and comprehensive description of the development of the Electric Current Activated/assisted Sintering technique (ECAS) for the obtainment of dense materials including nanostructured ones.
Abstract
This review article aims to provide an updated and comprehensive description of the development of the Electric Current Activated/assisted Sintering technique (ECAS) for the obtainment of dense materials including nanostructured ones. The use of ECAS for pure sintering purposes, when starting from already synthesized powders promoters, and to obtain the desired material by simultaneously performing synthesis and consolidation in one-step is reviewed. Specifically, more than a thousand papers published on this subject during the past decades are taken into account. The experimental procedures, formation mechanisms, characteristics, and functionality of a wide spectrum of dense materials fabricated by ECAS are presented. The influence of the most important operating parameters (i.e. current intensity, temperature, processing time, etc.) on product characteristics and process dynamics is reviewed for a large family of materials including ceramics, intermetallics, metal–ceramic and ceramic–ceramic composites. In this review, systems where synthesis and densification stages occur simultaneously, i.e. a fully dense product is formed immediately after reaction completion, as well as those ones for which a satisfactory densification degree is reached only by maintaining the application of the electric current once the full reaction conversion is obtained, are identified. In addition, emphasis is given to the obtainment of nanostructured dense materials due to their rapid progress and wide applications. Specifically, the effect of mechanical activation by ball milling of starting powders on ECAS process dynamics and product characteristics (i.e. density and microstructure) is analysed. The emerging theme from the large majority of the reviewed investigations is the comparison of ECAS over conventional methods including pressureless sintering, hot pressing, and others. Theoretical analysis pertaining to such technique is also proposed following the last results obtained on this topic.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Field-Assisted Sintering Technology/Spark Plasma Sintering: Mechanisms, Materials, and Technology Developments

TL;DR: Field-assisted sintering is a low voltage, direct current (DC) pulsed current activated, pressure-assisted, and synthesis technique, which has been widely applied for materials processing in the recent years as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Flash Sintering of Nanograin Zirconia in <5 s at 850°C

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that yttrium-stabilized zirconia can be sintered in a few seconds at ∼850°C to full density, starting from a green density of 0.5, by the application of a dc electrical field.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electric Current Activation of Sintering: A Review of the Pulsed Electric Current Sintering Process

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the fundamental aspects of the sintering process and identify the intrinsic benefits of the use of the parameters of current (and pulsing), pressure, and heating rate.
Journal ArticleDOI

Strengthening Mechanisms in a High-Strength Bulk Nanostructured Cu-Zn-Al Alloy Processed Via Cryomilling and Spark Plasma Sintering

TL;DR: In this paper, three-dimensional atom-probe tomography studies demonstrate that the distribution of Al is highly inhomogeneous in the sintered bulk samples, and Al-containing precipitates including Al(Cu,Zn)−O−N, Al-O-N and Al−N are distributed in the matrix.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electric current activated/assisted sintering (ECAS): a review of patents 1906–2008

TL;DR: The electric current activated/assisted sintering (ECAS) is an ever growing class of versatile techniques for sinterding particulate materials as discussed by the authors. But despite the tremendous advances over the last two decades in ECASed materials and products, there is a lack of comprehensive reviews on ECAS apparatuses and methods.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Electric discharge sintering of binary powder mixtures

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that Ni-Mo composite electric discharge sintering, like ordinary isothermal sinterings, is accompanied by dissolution of the molybdenum in the nickel.
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Microstructures and thermoelectric properties of p-type pseudo-binary Bi–Sb–Te alloys with partial substitution of Ga for Sb prepared by spark plasma sintering

TL;DR: In this article, a pseudo-binary Bi-Sb-Te alloys with Ga substitution for Sb in raw mixtures were prepared by spark plasma sintering (SPS) technique.
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In-situ synthesis of Ti matrix composite reinforced with dispersed Ti5Si3 particles via spark plasma sintering

TL;DR: In this article, a spark plasma sintering starting with Ti and SiO 2 was used to synthesize a matrix composite reinforced with dispersed Ti 5 Si 3 particles, and the dependence on microstructure, bulk density, fraction of spatial occupation and Vickers hardness was investigated.
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Effects of composition and thermal treatment on infrared transmission of Dy-α-sialon

TL;DR: In this article, the infrared transmissions of Dy-α-sialon with three compositions, Dy 0.33 Si 9.3 Al 2.7 O 1.8 O 0.6 N 15.4, Dy0.4 Si 10.2 Al 1.3 O 1 N 14.3, and Dy1.5 mm in thickness, were investigated by spark plasma sintering and post-sintering thermal treatment at 1700°C for 7 and 17 hours, respectively.
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Superconducting properties of polycrystalline MgB2 superconductors fabricated by spark plasma sintering

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reported the upper critical field (H c2 ), the irreversibility field ( H irr), and the lower critical field of a dense polycrystalline MgB 2 superconductor which was prepared by the spark plasma sintering (SPS).
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