Science of Sintering (Jan 2020)

Effects of mechanical activation on the formation and sintering kinetics of barium strontium titanate ceramics

  • Kosanović Darko,
  • Labus Nebojša J.,
  • Živojinović Jelena,
  • Peleš-Tadić Adriana,
  • Blagojević Vladimir A.,
  • Pavlović Vladimir B.

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2298/SOS2004371K
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 52, no. 4
pp. 371 – 385

Abstract

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The influence of mechanical activation on the formation, sintering kinetics and morphology was investigated in sintered barium strontium titanate (BST) ceramics with different Ba-to-Sr ratios. Initial powders were mechanically activated for 20 and 120 min, leading to mechano-chemical reaction and formation of BaxSr1-xTiO3 phases. Agglomeration was found to represent an important factor in the process of formation of BaxSr1-xTiO3 phases around 800°C and during sintering. It reduces the effectiveness of mechanical activation on formation of BaxSr1-xTiO3 phases beyond the short period (20 min), while in the process of sintering, prolonged mechanical activation (120 min) leads to a significant reduction in sintering temperature and the corresponding value of activation energy. In addition, all three systems show a phase transformation around 1100°C, attributed to the hexagonal-to-cubic phase transition. Morphology of the final sintered ceramics can be correlated primarily with the state of the pre-sintered powder, where mechanically activated powders with smaller particle size produced more compact and less porous final product.

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