| Literature DB >> 34947270 |
Nina Obradovic1, William G Fahrenholtz2, Cole Corlett2, Suzana Filipovic1, Marko Nikolic3, Bojan A Marinkovic4, Simone Failla5, Diletta Sciti5, Daniele Di Rosa6, Elisa Sani6.
Abstract
Magnesium aluminate and other alumina-based spinels attract attention due to their high hardness, high mechanical strength, and low dielectric constant. MgAl2O4 was produced by a solid-state reaction between MgO and α-Al2O3 powders. Mechanical activation for 30 min in a planetary ball mill was used to increase the reactivity of powders. Yttrium oxide and graphene were added to prevent abnormal grain growth during sintering. Samples were sintered by hot pressing under vacuum at 1450 °C. Phase composition and microstructure of sintered specimens were characterized by X-ray powder diffraction and scanning electron microscopy. Rietveld analysis revealed 100% pure spinel phase in all sintered specimens, and a decrease in crystallite size with the addition of yttria or graphene. Density measurements indicated that the mechanically activated specimen reached 99.6% relative density. Furthermore, the highest solar absorbance and highest spectral selectivity as a function of temperature were detected for the mechanically activated specimen with graphene addition. Mechanical activation is an efficient method to improve densification of MgAl2O4 prepared from mixed oxide powders, while additives improve microstructure and optical properties.Entities:
Keywords: dopants; mechanical activation; optical properties; sintering
Year: 2021 PMID: 34947270 PMCID: PMC8707405 DOI: 10.3390/ma14247674
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Starting composition, sintering parameters, densities.
| Name | Composition | Process | Temperature | Pressure | Dwell Time at TMAX | Height | Weight | Bulk Density |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| °C | MPa | min | mm | g | g·cm−3 | |||
| HP1 | Al2O3 + MgO | Planetary | 1450 | 30 | 5 | 7.5 | 19.35 | 3.52 |
| HP2 | Al2O3 + MgO | Ball milled only | 10 | 8.04 | 18.84 | 3.46 | ||
| HP3 | Al2O3 + MgO + 0.1 wt.% Y2O3 | Planetary | 5 | 7.1 | 18.55 | 3.55 | ||
| HP4 | Al2O3 + MgO + 1 wt.% C | Planetary | 6 | 7.5 | 19.49 | 3.47 |
Figure 1Sintered specimens: HP1—30 min-activated sample, HP2—nonactivated sample, HP3—30 min-activated sample with yttrium addition, and HP4—30 min-activated sample with graphene addition.
Figure 2XRPD patterns and Rietveld fits of the sintered specimens: (a) HP1, (b) HP2, (c) HP3, and (d) HP4.
Figure 3SEM images of sintered specimens: (a) HP1, (b) HP2, (c) HP3, and (d) HP4.
Figure 4Room-temperature spectral absorbance.
Figure 5Room-temperature spectral hemispherical reflectance (a) and spectral hemispherical transmittance (b). Sample HP4 shows a null transmittance in the whole investigated range, thus it does not appear in the plot.
Solar absorptance of sintered specimens, calculated from Equation (2) and of SiC pellets from [37,38].
| Sample | Solar Absorptance α |
|---|---|
| HP1 | 0.85 |
| HP2 | 0.74 |
| HP3 | 0.73 |
| HP4 | 0.95 |
| Dense SiC [ | 0.78 |
| Dense SiC [ | 0.85 |
Figure 6Estimated thermal emittance as a function of temperature. The label (t) identifies the samples showing transparency (non-null transmittance) at the considered thicknesses.
Figure 7Estimated temperature-dependent spectral selectivity. The label (t) identifies the samples showing transparency (non-null transmittance) at the considered thicknesses.