HEAT TREATMENTS OF A MICROWAVE SINTERED SILICON NITRIDE
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Abstract
The sintering of silicon nitride ceramics follows the rationale that the final
mechanical properties ofthe material are directly linked to the thermo-mechanical history
ofthe liquid phase of sintering. Post sinter heat treatments performed on the as sintered
material have the potential to alter the character of the secondary phase, and therefore
modify the mechanical properties ofthe material.
In the present study a mixed a/p SiAlON ceramic was manufactured by microwave
sintering, then post sinter heat treated under various conditions. Analysis of the
microstructure as a function ofthe heat treatment conditions oftemperature, pressure, and
time was performed using quantitative x-ray analysis, and scanning and transmission
electron microscopy. The properties of hardness and fracture toughness were also
classified as a function of the said processing conditions. Microstructural mechanisms
responsible for the changes in mechanical properties were identified and their
implications explored.
Increasing temperature and time were found to degrade the hardness ofthe material
due to an increase in the oc —> p phase transformation. Pressure was found to have no
effect on the hardness The p SiAlON grain size increased with increasing temperature. The increase in
grain size followed grain coarsening behaviour, and was found to effect a small increase
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in fracture toughness when time was increased from 30 to 120 minutes; longer times had
no similar effect. The grain size was predicted to have increased significantly after long
times, and remain unchanged as a function ofpressure.
The secondary crystalline phase was discovered to be the most crucial
microstructural parameter responsible for the fracture toughness. The chemistry and high
degree of crystallinity ofthe secondary phase resulted in an intergranular fracture mode,
which led to toughening by crack deflection, fiber pullout, and elastic bridging. The
amount of secondary phase was found to decrease with increasing temperature and
pressure, thereby reducing the amount ofpossible toughening, and causing a decrease in
the fracture toughness.
The discoveries made in this study have resulted in the development of process
optimization guidelines for the post sinter heat treatment of the current material.