3 resultados para silicate-based ceramics
em Aston University Research Archive
Resumo:
Abstract Structural ceramics were manufactured from industrial byproducts and lime by a compression moulding/vacuum dewatering technique. Treatment of these ceramics with supercritical carbon dioxide was found to both significantly increase their flexural strength and activate cementation in the industrial byproducts at least as efficiently as heat curing. Flexural strengths of up to 10 MPa were achieved. Strength improvements were associated with decreased porosity and conversion of calcium hydroxide to calcium carbonate. Life cycle assessment of proposed products made from such materials indicated that the total reduction in embodied carbon dioxide achieved, as a result of combining use of byproducts with recombination of carbon dioxide, was up to 70%. © 2010 Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining.
New negative temperature coefficient thermistor ceramics in Mn-doped CaCu3-xMnxTi4O12 (0≤x≤1) system
Resumo:
New negative temperature coefficient (NTC) ceramics based on CaCu 3-xMnxTi4O12 (0≤x≤1) compositions have been investigated. The grain size of the CaCu 3-xMnxTi4O12 samples decreases at first and then increases with increasing Mn content. The X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy analysis corroborates the presence of Mn3+ and Mn 4+ in Mn-doped samples, which results in a decrease in the activation energy. All the NTC thermistors prepared show a linear relationship between the natural logarithm of the resistivity and the reciprocal temperature, indicative of NTC characteristics. The Mn-doped CaCu3-xMnxTi 4O12 NTC thermistors provide various electrical properties, depending on Mn content. The values of ρ25, B constant and activation energy of the NTC thermistors are in the range of 2.22×106-3.22×108 Ω cm, 5488-8031 K, and 0.473-0.692 eV, respectively. © 2014 Elsevier Ltd and Techna Group S.r.l. All rights reserved.
Resumo:
A new novel approach for the stabilisation of polymer-clay nanocomposites has been investigated based on reacting chemically an antioxidant function, a hindered phenol moiety, with an organic modifier based on a quaternary ammonium salt. The chemically linked antioxidant-containing organic modifier (AO-OM) was then introduced into natural montmorillonite (MMt) through a cation-exchange reaction resulting in antioxidant-containing organo-modified clay (AO-OM-MMt). The new antioxidant-containing modified clay, along with other organo-modified clays having a similar organo-modifier but without the reacted antioxidant, were characterised by spectroscopic, thermogravimetric and x-ray diffraction techniques and tested for their thermo-oxidative stability. PA11-based clay nanocomposites samples containing the AO-OM-MMt and the other organo-modified clays, both without and with an added (i.e. not chemically reacted) hindered phenol antioxidant (similar to the one used in the AO-OM) were prepared by melt processing and examined for their processing and long-term thermal-oxidative stability at high temperatures. It was shown that although the new organo-modifier, AO-OM, was also susceptible to the Hoffman elimination reaction, the nanocomposites containing this newly modified clay (PA11/AO-OM-MMt) showed higher melt processing and long-term thermo-oxidative stability, along with excellent clay dispersion and exfoliation, compared to the other PA11-nanocomposites examined here (with and without the conventionally added antioxidant). It is suggested here that the excellent overall performance observed for the PA11/AO-OM-MMt nanocomposites is due to an in-situ partial release of low molecular weight antioxidant species having stabilising functionalities that are capable of acting locally at the interface between the inorganic clay platelets and the polymeric matrix which is a critical area for the onset of degradation processes.