Production of porous ceramic materialusing different sources of alumina and calcia

ABSTRACTNumerous papers and publications report the use of microporous calcium hexaluminate (CaO.6Al2O3; CA6) as a key raw material for high temperature insulating materials. This material has unique properties with respect to chemical purity and mineral composition. Another important property of CA6 is its structure, which consists of platelet-shaped crystals that interlock. The free distance between the crystals defines the microporous structure. The low density in combination with the micropores hampers heat transfer by radiation at temperatures exceeding 1000 oC and results in a low thermal conductivity. Given the advantages presented by this material, it is necessary to understand the formation mechanism of CA6 grains in order to better develop the potential applications of this material. CA6 can be fabricated using organic binders to consolidate the Al2O3-CaCO3 powder mixture and to provide green strength so that a green body can be formed and retains the desired shape before heating. However, these organic binders must be completely thermally decomposed so that they do not remain in the sintered body as carbon or ash. Moreover, the use of organic binders releases large volumes of gases such as carbon dioxide from the green body during heating. Therefore, an eco-friendly ceramic fabrication process has been developed that employs an inorganic binder (hydraulic alumina). The aim of the present work was to study the synthesis of porous calcium-hexaluminate ceramics using calcined alumina or hydraulic alumina combined with different sources of calcia (CaCO3 and Ca(OH)2) at different temperatures. The materials produced were characterized by X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy, apparent porosity and mercury intrusion porosimetry. The materials produced by hydraulic alumina presented higher porosity and larger pores compared to those produced from calcined alumina

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Main Authors: Oliveira,Ivone Regina de, Leite,Vitoria Marques Cesar, Lima,Milene Paula Vargas Porto, Salomão,Rafael
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Laboratório de Hidrogênio, Coppe - Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro 2015
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1517-70762015000300739
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spelling oai:scielo:S1517-707620150003007392015-10-21Production of porous ceramic materialusing different sources of alumina and calciaOliveira,Ivone Regina deLeite,Vitoria Marques CesarLima,Milene Paula Vargas PortoSalomão,Rafael Calcium hexaluminate synthesis inorganic binder properties ABSTRACTNumerous papers and publications report the use of microporous calcium hexaluminate (CaO.6Al2O3; CA6) as a key raw material for high temperature insulating materials. This material has unique properties with respect to chemical purity and mineral composition. Another important property of CA6 is its structure, which consists of platelet-shaped crystals that interlock. The free distance between the crystals defines the microporous structure. The low density in combination with the micropores hampers heat transfer by radiation at temperatures exceeding 1000 oC and results in a low thermal conductivity. Given the advantages presented by this material, it is necessary to understand the formation mechanism of CA6 grains in order to better develop the potential applications of this material. CA6 can be fabricated using organic binders to consolidate the Al2O3-CaCO3 powder mixture and to provide green strength so that a green body can be formed and retains the desired shape before heating. However, these organic binders must be completely thermally decomposed so that they do not remain in the sintered body as carbon or ash. Moreover, the use of organic binders releases large volumes of gases such as carbon dioxide from the green body during heating. Therefore, an eco-friendly ceramic fabrication process has been developed that employs an inorganic binder (hydraulic alumina). The aim of the present work was to study the synthesis of porous calcium-hexaluminate ceramics using calcined alumina or hydraulic alumina combined with different sources of calcia (CaCO3 and Ca(OH)2) at different temperatures. The materials produced were characterized by X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy, apparent porosity and mercury intrusion porosimetry. The materials produced by hydraulic alumina presented higher porosity and larger pores compared to those produced from calcined aluminainfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessLaboratório de Hidrogênio, Coppe - Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiroem cooperação com a Associação Brasileira do Hidrogênio, ABH2Matéria (Rio de Janeiro) v.20 n.3 20152015-09-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1517-70762015000300739en10.1590/S1517-707620150003.0078
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libraryname SciELO
language English
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author Oliveira,Ivone Regina de
Leite,Vitoria Marques Cesar
Lima,Milene Paula Vargas Porto
Salomão,Rafael
spellingShingle Oliveira,Ivone Regina de
Leite,Vitoria Marques Cesar
Lima,Milene Paula Vargas Porto
Salomão,Rafael
Production of porous ceramic materialusing different sources of alumina and calcia
author_facet Oliveira,Ivone Regina de
Leite,Vitoria Marques Cesar
Lima,Milene Paula Vargas Porto
Salomão,Rafael
author_sort Oliveira,Ivone Regina de
title Production of porous ceramic materialusing different sources of alumina and calcia
title_short Production of porous ceramic materialusing different sources of alumina and calcia
title_full Production of porous ceramic materialusing different sources of alumina and calcia
title_fullStr Production of porous ceramic materialusing different sources of alumina and calcia
title_full_unstemmed Production of porous ceramic materialusing different sources of alumina and calcia
title_sort production of porous ceramic materialusing different sources of alumina and calcia
description ABSTRACTNumerous papers and publications report the use of microporous calcium hexaluminate (CaO.6Al2O3; CA6) as a key raw material for high temperature insulating materials. This material has unique properties with respect to chemical purity and mineral composition. Another important property of CA6 is its structure, which consists of platelet-shaped crystals that interlock. The free distance between the crystals defines the microporous structure. The low density in combination with the micropores hampers heat transfer by radiation at temperatures exceeding 1000 oC and results in a low thermal conductivity. Given the advantages presented by this material, it is necessary to understand the formation mechanism of CA6 grains in order to better develop the potential applications of this material. CA6 can be fabricated using organic binders to consolidate the Al2O3-CaCO3 powder mixture and to provide green strength so that a green body can be formed and retains the desired shape before heating. However, these organic binders must be completely thermally decomposed so that they do not remain in the sintered body as carbon or ash. Moreover, the use of organic binders releases large volumes of gases such as carbon dioxide from the green body during heating. Therefore, an eco-friendly ceramic fabrication process has been developed that employs an inorganic binder (hydraulic alumina). The aim of the present work was to study the synthesis of porous calcium-hexaluminate ceramics using calcined alumina or hydraulic alumina combined with different sources of calcia (CaCO3 and Ca(OH)2) at different temperatures. The materials produced were characterized by X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy, apparent porosity and mercury intrusion porosimetry. The materials produced by hydraulic alumina presented higher porosity and larger pores compared to those produced from calcined alumina
publisher Laboratório de Hidrogênio, Coppe - Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro
publishDate 2015
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1517-70762015000300739
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AT limamilenepaulavargasporto productionofporousceramicmaterialusingdifferentsourcesofaluminaandcalcia
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