| Literature DB >> 28729653 |
Zhi Dong1, Nan Liu1, Zongqing Ma2, Chenxi Liu1, Qianying Guo1, Zeid Abdullah Alothman3, Yusuke Yamauchi4,5, Md Shahriar A Hossain4,5, Yongchang Liu1.
Abstract
With the aim of preparing high performance oxide-dispersion-strengthened tungsten based alloys by powder metallurgy, the W-Y2O3 composite nanopowder precursor was fabricated by an improved wet chemical method with anion surfactant sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) addition. It is found that the employment of SDS can dramatically decrease W grain size (about 40 nm) and improve the size uniformity. What's more, SDS addition can also remarkably improve the uniform dispersion of Y2O3 particles during the synthesis process. For the alloy whose powder precursor was fabricated by traditional wet chemical method without SDS addition, only a few Y2O3 dispersoids with size of approximate 10-50 nm distribute unevenly within tungsten grains. Nevertheless, for the sintered alloy whose powder precursor was produced by improved wet chemical method, the Y2O3 dispersoids (about 2-10 nm in size) with near spherical shape are dispersed well within tungsten grains. Additionally, compared with the former, the alloy possesses smaller grain size (approximate 700 nm) and higher relative density (99.00%). And a Vickers microhardness value up to 600 Hv was also obtained for this alloy. Based on these results, the employment of SDS in traditional wet chemical method is a feasible way to fabricate high performance yttria-dispersion-strengthened tungsten based alloys.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28729653 PMCID: PMC5519592 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-06437-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1XRD patterns of the W-Y2O3 composite powder precursors fabricated by traditional and improved wet chemical method.
Figure 2(a) SEM images of the reduced W-Y2O3 composite powder precursor fabricated by traditional wet chemical method, (b) TEM images of the reduced W-Y2O3 composite powder precursor fabricated by traditional wet chemical method, (c) SEM images of the reduced W-Y2O3 composite powder precursor fabricated by improved wet chemical method and (d) TEM images of the reduced W-Y2O3 composite powder precursor fabricated by improved wet chemical method.
Figure 3HRTEM image corresponding to a small region in Fig. 2d.
Figure 4SEM images of the fracture surfaces (a) W-Y2O3 alloy fabricated by traditional wet chemical method and subsequent SPS, (b) W-Y2O3 alloy fabricated by improved wet chemical method and subsequent SPS.
Figure 5TEM images of the tungsten grain interior corresponding to W-Y2O3 alloy fabricated by (a) traditional wet chemical method and subsequent SPS and (b) improved wet chemical method and subsequent SPS.
Figure 6HRTEM images of Y2O3 particles within tungsten grain of W-Y2O3 alloy fabricated by (a) and (b) traditional wet chemical method and subsequent SPS, (c) improved wet chemical method and subsequent SPS.
Relative density, grain size and Vickers microhardness of the sintered W-Y2O3 alloys.
| Samples | Relative density(%) | Grain size(μm) | Hv |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sample 1 | 96.28 | 5.82 | 354.92 |
| Sample 2 | 99.00 | 0.76 | 598.74 |