Silicon carbide is one of the hardest ceramic materials, boasting extremely high strength and thermal conductivity. Additionally, its resistance to oxidation and corrosion makes it suitable for high temperature environments.
Reaction bonded SiC has coarse grains and low corrosion resistance, while direct sintered SiC is more dense and offers improved high temperature performance. Pressureless sintering uses very fine SiC powder with non-oxide sintering additives to produce dense material with excellent physical properties.
Dureza
Silicon carbide is one of the hardest common abrasive materials, ranking 9.5 on Mohs’ scale of hardness – close to diamond’s rating of 10. This hardness affords it excellent wear resistance even at elevated temperatures; chemicals, salts, acids and alkalis don’t pose much of a threat; thermal shock resistance is good; plus its weight is half that of steel!
Liquid phase sintering offers advantages over other processes, including low processing temperatures and good shape capability. Furthermore, its full density and superior mechanical properties make it suitable for abrasive machining, grinding and polishing as well as cutting, drilling, etching and milling applications.
Sintered SiC is widely utilized for semiconductor production equipment parts, lasers and fusion reactor structural applications due to its exceptional chemical stability, temperature resistance, low density, strength, wear resistance and low activation energy. Both reaction bonded and direct sintered grades of SiC are available; reaction bonded grades typically offer lower costs with coarser graining for lower impact and heat work while direct sintered grades offer superior wear resistance at elevated temperatures with finer graining that offers greater wear resistance at elevated temperatures. Reaction Bonded grades having coarser grain finer grain sizes being typically specified more often used. For greater hardness at work work conditions than high temperature application applications or work required than Direct sintered types used due superior wear resistance at elevated temps more commonly specified compared for use, respectively due having superior wear resistance at elevated temperatures are desired and hardness are preferred over when specified than either Rejection might use are preferred due having superior wear resistance/hardness at elevated work work more commonly specified directly Sinted types when specified with direct sintered grades may need both options are specified and hardness provided more often used so.
Strength
Silicon carbide is an extremely strong refractory ceramic material with superior hardness, high temperature strength and chemical corrosion resistance – properties which make it one of the world’s most versatile refractories and utilized in various industrial applications.
Hot pressing sintering is one of the primary production methods for SiC ceramics. This technique utilizes extremely fine silicon carbide powder mixed with sintering additives that is compacted using traditional ceramic forming methods like isostatic press, die pressing, or injection to produce dense structures made up of tiny particles that provide strength.
Liquid Phase Pressureless Sintering of SiC (LPPSiC) is another densification technique for SiC. Here, liquid silicon or silicon alloy is introduced into a green body of a-SiC particles to form b-SiC which reacts and bonds with existing a-SiC particles to densify them and densify the body as a whole.
Reaction sintered silicon carbide has excellent shape capability for complex shapes, low processing temperatures and purity levels; its mechanical properties such as bending strength are lower than normal sintered silicon carbide; to increase this property it is necessary to control residual Si sizes by controlling particle sizes below 100nm – this achievement marks a great success in improving strength of LSiC ceramics.
Resistência à corrosão
Silicon carbide boasts excellent corrosion resistance and can withstand temperatures of up to 1,900degC, making it suitable for applications where chemical and thermal shocks may damage components.
Corrosion in ceramics occurs as a result of the formation of an oxide layer on their surfaces, usually silica or silicate, depending on factors like environmental exposure, impurities, sintering aids, grain boundary phases and reactions that occurred shortly thereafter. This leads to vast variations in corrosion behavior of silicon carbide and silicon nitride materials.
As the primary concerns when designing materials for use in corrosive environments are survival rate (measured as recession rate in corrosive medium) and mechanical strength (C-ring or four-point bend strength), corrosion increases surface flaws which weaken its strength over time and decrease its mechanical lifetime.
Sintered silicon carbide is an excellent choice for use in harsh environments due to its combination of high strength and wear resistance, low specific density, and excellent tribological properties. It is often used in components that must withstand impact loads from heavy loads like blasting nozzles or bearings for sliding bearings; additionally it is widely employed in carbon fiber reinforced silicon carbide brakes or bulletproof armor production as it is resistant to high stresses and temperatures.
Durabilidade
Sintered silicon carbide is an extremely hard ceramic material with superior wear resistance and corrosion protection properties, making it an excellent abrasive material. It can be found in grinding wheels, hones for honing processes, sandblasters and water jet cutters for grinding or honing applications, as well as water jet cutting processes.
Chemical resistance of this material allows it to withstand prolonged exposure to common inorganic acids, salts, and alkalis without experiencing degradation. Furthermore, its durability is increased through tightly packed covalent bonds formed from 4 silicon and 4 carbon atoms in its formation of tetrahedral coordinations.
Sintered SiC is created by pressing and sintering (heating) silica powder particles together. Sintering allows these individual particles to fuse together into a solid piece with high hardness and strength that is also resistant to oxidation and corrosion; additionally it has greater durability than most types of ceramics.
Reaction bonded silicon carbide, produced by infiltrating liquid silicon into porous graphite or carbon preforms, offers lower strength than sintered silicon carbide but is more suitable due to low processing temperatures, good shapeability, and greater purity. Commercial reaction-sintered silicon carbide has room-temperature bending strength of around 300 MPa.
Reaction-sintered silicon carbide with boron or carbon sintering aids has extremely high creep resistance, achieved through modifications of grain boundary energies and surface energies as well as increasing volume diffusion rates to promote densification and densification. This allows grains to remain in direct crystalline contact without forming second phase structures at grain boundaries.