| Literature DB >> 27671639 |
Jules M Dake1, Jette Oddershede2, Henning O Sørensen3, Thomas Werz1, J Cole Shatto1, Kentaro Uesugi4, Søren Schmidt5, Carl E Krill6.
Abstract
Sintering is a key technology for processing ceramic and metallic powders into solid objects of complex geometry, particularly in the burgeoning field of energy storage materials. The modeling of sintering processes, however, has not kept pace with applications. Conventional models, which assume ideal arrangements of constituent powders while ignoring their underlying crystallinity, achieve at best a qualitative description of the rearrangement, densification, and coarsening of powder compacts during thermal processing. Treating a semisolid Al-Cu alloy as a model system for late-stage sintering-during which densification plays a subordinate role to coarsening-we have used 3D X-ray diffraction microscopy to track the changes in sample microstructure induced by annealing. The results establish the occurrence of significant particle rotations, driven in part by the dependence of boundary energy on crystallographic misorientation. Evidently, a comprehensive model for sintering must incorporate crystallographic parameters into the thermodynamic driving forces governing microstructural evolution.Entities:
Keywords: 3D microstructural evolution; Ostwald ripening; grain rotation; sintering; x-ray imaging
Year: 2016 PMID: 27671639 PMCID: PMC5068287 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1602293113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205