| Literature DB >> 35423656 |
Mrinmoy Garai1, Arianit A Reka2, Basudeb Karmakar1, Atiar R Molla1.
Abstract
In understanding the catalytic efficacy of silver (Ag0) and gold (Au0) nanoparticles (NPs) on glass-ceramic (GC) crystallization, the microstructure-machinability correlation of a SiO2-MgO-Al2O3-B2O3-K2O-MgF2 system is studied. The thermal parameters viz., glass transition temperature (T g) and crystallization temperature (T c) were extensively changed by varying NPs (in situ or ex situ). Tc was found to be increased (T c = 870-875 °C) by 90-110 °C when ex situ NPs were present in the glass system. Under controlled heat-treatment at 950 ± 10 °C, the glasses were converted into glass-ceramics with the predominant presence of crystalline phase (XRD) fluorophlogopite mica, [KMg3(AlSi3O10)F2]. Along with the secondary phase enstatite (MgSiO3), the presence of Ag and Au particles (FCC system) were identified by XRD. A microstructure containing spherical crystallite precipitates (∼50-400 nm) has been observed through FESEM in in situ doped GCs. An ex situ Ag doped GC matrix composed of rock-like and plate-like crystallites mostly of size 1-3 μm ensured its superior machinability. Vicker's and Knoop microhardness of in situ doped GCs were estimated within the range 4.45-4.61 GPa which is reduced to 4.21-4.34 GPa in the ex situ Ag system. Machinability of GCs was found to be in the order, ex situ Ag > ex situ Au ∼ in situ Ag > in situ Au. Thus, the ex situ Ag/Au doped SiO2-MgO-Al2O3-B2O3-K2O-MgF2 GC has potential for use as a machinable glass-ceramic. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 35423656 PMCID: PMC8695994 DOI: 10.1039/d0ra10519h
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 3.361
Fig. 1Schematic diagram showing the synthesis of in situ and ex situ nanoparticle doped SiO2–Al2O3–MgO–K2O–B2O3–MgF2 glasses.
Raw materials and corresponding purity for synthesizing the nanoparticle doped SiO2–Al2O3–MgO–K2O–B2O3–MgF2 glasses
| Glass component | Precursor material | Purity (%) | Source/company |
|---|---|---|---|
| SiO2 | Quartz powder | 99.8 | Sipur A1 Bremtheler Quartzitwerk, Usingen, Germany |
| Al2O3 | Al(OH)3 | 97 | Loba Chemie, India |
| MgO | Mg(OH)2 | 97 | Loba Chemie, India |
| K2O | K2CO3 | 98 | Loba Chemie, India |
| B2O3 | H3BO3 | 99.5 | Loba Chemie, India |
| MgF2 | MgF2 | 99.9 | Loba Chemie, India |
| SnO | SnO | 99.9 | Alfa Aesar, India |
|
| AgNO3 | 99.9 | Exceller, Qualigens fine Chemicals, India |
|
| HAuCl4· | 49% Au | Loba Chemie, India |
|
| Ag powder size <100 nm | 99.5 | Sigma-Aldrich fine Chemicals, India |
|
| Au powder size <100 nm | 99.9 | Sigma-Aldrich fine Chemicals, India |
Composition (wt%) of different precursor nanoparticle doped SiO2–Al2O3–MgO–K2O–B2O3–MgF2 glasses
| Glass | SiO2 | Al2O3 | MgO | K2O | B2O3 | MgF2 | SnO | Excess |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NG-1 | 39 | 16 | 12 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 0.3 | Ag = 0.2 ( |
| NG-2 | 39 | 16 | 12 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 0.3 | Au = 0.2 ( |
| NG-3 | 39 | 16 | 12 | 10 | 11 | 12 | — | Ag = 0.2 ( |
| NG-4 | 39 | 16 | 12 | 10 | 11 | 12 | — | Au = 0.2 ( |
Fig. 2DSC curves of in situ (a) and ex situ (b) Ag/Au nanoparticle doped SiO2–Al2O3–MgO–K2O–B2O3–MgF2 glasses.
DSC thermal properties (°C) of different precursor nanoparticle doped SiO2–Al2O3–MgO–K2O–B2O3–MgF2 glassesa
| Glass |
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|
| NG-1 | 630 ± 2 | 748 ± 2 | 785 ± 2 |
| NG-2 | 622 ± 2 | 732 ± 2 | 762 ± 2 |
| NG-3 | 649 ± 2 | 780 ± 2 | 870 ± 2 |
| NG-4 | 652 ± 2 | 763 ± 2 | 875 ± 2 |
T g = glass transition temperature; Tg = crystallization onset temperature; Tc = crystallization temperature.
Fig. 3X-ray diffraction (XRD) pattern of (a) SiO2–Al2O3–MgO–K2O–B2O3–MgF2 glasses and (b) corresponding glass-ceramics heat-treated at 950 °C.
XRD peaks and corresponding planes of different crystalline phases developed in studied machineable glass-ceramic
| Peak position (2 | Corresponding planes | Crystalline phase (chemical formula) | JCPDS file no. |
|---|---|---|---|
| 19.4, 23.3, 26.6, 30.3, 32.7, 34.3, 36.6, 39.3, 45.1, 52.5, 60.5, 62.9 | (110), (112), (003), (113), (023), (200), (004), (040), (111), (115), (331), (261) | Fluorophlogopite (KMg3AlSi3O10F2) | 71-1542 |
| 30.1, 36.7, 60.4 | (321), (112), (650) | Enstatite (MgSiO3) | 83-2057 |
| 36.5, 44.8, 64.7 | (111), (200), (220) | Silver particle (Ag) | 01-1164 |
| 38.8, 45.1, 65.2 | (111), (200), (220) | Gold particle (Au) | 02-1095 |
Fig. 4FESEM photomicrograph of (a) NG-1, (b) NG-2, (c) NG-3 and (d) NG-4 glass-ceramics heat-treated at 950 °C (SiO2–Al2O3–MgO–K2O–B2O3–MgF2 samples polished and chemically etched by 2 vol% aqueous HF solution for 7 min).
Fig. 5Representative FESEM photomicrograph (a) and EDX pattern (a′) of ex situ Ag-doped SiO2–Al2O3–MgO–K2O–B2O3–MgF2 glass-ceramic (NG-3) heat-treated at 950 °C (sample is polished and chemically etched by 2 vol% aqueous HF solution for 7 min).
Fig. 6Photomicrograph of Vickers indentation impression on SiO2–Al2O3–MgO–K2O–B2O3–MgF2 glass-ceramics i.e. (a) NG-1, (b) NG-2, (c) NG-3 and (d) NG-4 heat-treated at 950 °C.
Fig. 7Photomicrograph of Knoop indentation impression on SiO2–Al2O3–MgO–K2O–B2O3–MgF2 glass-ceramics i.e. (a) NG-1, (b) NG-2, (c) NG-3 and (d) NG-4 heat-treated at 950 °C.
Fig. 8Variation of Vickers & Knoop microhardness (a), and change of machinability & density (b) for different SiO2–Al2O3–MgO–K2O–B2O3–MgF2 samples heat-treated at 950 °C.