Open Ceramics (Mar 2023)
Study of neck formation and densification in porous hydroxyapatite ceramics using thermal conductivity measurements
Abstract
Neck formation and densification during sintering have strong effects on the thermal conductivity of a porous ceramic body. This has been described by an analytical model using grain conductivity, grain size, pore fraction and particle – particle contact area as input parameters. It has been tested on hydroxyapatite ceramics sintered with conventional, microwave and spark plasma techniques. The green bodies containing at least 40% porosity yield conductivity values in the range 0.24–0.29 Wm−1K−1. Neck formation in the initial stage of sintering increases the values to above 0.5 Wm−1K−1. Further increase is achieved by densification, well described by Landauer's relation as part of the model with close agreement to experiment for hydroxyapatite ceramics containing 40 to 5% porosity. An evaluation of thermal conductivity for 100% dense hydroxyapatite gives a value of 1.5 Wm−1K−1 which is almost constant between room temperature and 900 °C.