Materials & Design (Jun 2020)

A review of multi-physical fields induced phenomena and effects in spark plasma sintering: Fundamentals and applications

  • Zheng-Yang Hu,
  • Zhao-Hui Zhang,
  • Xing-Wang Cheng,
  • Fu-Chi Wang,
  • Yi-Fan Zhang,
  • Sheng-Lin Li

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 191

Abstract

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Spark plasma sintering (SPS), also known as pulsed electric current sintering (PECS) or field-assisted sintering technique (FAST), belongs to a class of powder metallurgy techniques. In SPS, the sample is simultaneously subjected to a uniaxial pressure and electrical current in a vacuum or protective atmosphere. Although the fundamental principles of this procedure were first proposed over 50 years ago, SPS acquired major importance only within the last 20 years. Scholars come to realize that SPS technique enables control of the powder surface condition, atomic diffusion behavior, and phase stability and crystal growth behavior, as well as accelerating densification of hard-to-sinter materials. This review summarizes the latest research findings with respect to experimental procedures, densification behaviors, microstructural characteristics, and mechanical properties of various traditional and novel materials synthesized using SPS, mainly highlighting the heating mechanisms in SPS and the effects induced by multi-physical fields on materials. In addition, influences of operating parameters containing current, voltage, and uniaxial pressure on product characteristics are reviewed for a wide range of materialsincluding hard-to-sinter materials, carbon-containing materials, nanocrystalline materials, non-equilibrium materials, gradient materials, interconnect materials, complex shape materials, and advanced functional materials.

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