Search results for "composites"
showing 10 items of 1905 documents
INFLUENCE OF MONOXIDES ADDITION ON SINTERING OF SODIUM-POTASSIUM NIOBATES SOLID SOLUTION
2008
ABSTRACT In this paper the preparation, structure and dielectric parameters of ceramics from different powders of pure potassium sodium niobate (KNN) and KNN doped with 1.0 wt% of Li2O, CdO, Bi2O3, MnO2, V2O5 and WO3 have been studied. The dopping of sintering aids did not affect the crystallographic structure of the ceramics significantly; all ceramic samples had a single-phase perovskite structure. Added elements Li2O, CdO, MnO2, V2O5 effectively decreased the sintering temperature of KNN (50°–80°C). All sintering aids influenced sinterability, microstructure and dielectric properties of ceramics. Dielectric constant for doped samples increased from 6000 up to 8000.
Graphene as a carbon source effects the nanometallurgy of nickel in Ni,Mn layered double hydroxide-graphene oxide composites.
2012
[EN] Thermal treatment of the hybrid material formed by the spontaneous precipitation of graphene oxide and Ni,Mn layered double hydroxide leads to the segregation of nickel metal nanoparticles (Ni NPs) and the decomposition of graphene to CO2. Increasing the temperature increases the Ni NP size and results in the complete disappearance of graphene.
Chromium oxide nanoparticles with controlled size prepared from hydrothermal chromium oxyhydroxide precursors
2017
Abstract This work reports the preparation of morphologically well-defined chromium oxide nanoparticles with controlled sizes of 20–30 nm. The synthetic procedure encompass two stages, the first one refers to the preparation of chromium oxyhydroxide nanoparticles by a hydrothermal approach of previously precipitated xerogels, followed by a thermal transformation of CrOOH nanoparticles to Cr2O3. The series of chromium oxyhydroxide particles sized over the range 15–50 nm were prepared through the control of the pH of precipitation of the xerogels and the water/xerogel ratio of the hydrothermal aging. Results showed the formation of non-aggregated oxyhydroxide nanoparticles with two different …
Ab initio study of the SrTiO3, BaTiO3 and PbTiO3 (001) surfaces
2004
The results of first-principles calculations of the two possible terminations of (0 0 1) surfaces of SrTiO 3 (STO), BaTiO3 (BTO) and PbTiO3 (PTO) perovskites are presented. Surface atomic structures and their electronic configurations have been calculated using ab initio density functional theory (DFT) combined with hybrid (B3PW) exchange-correlation technique. Our results are compared with previous quantum mechanical calculations and available experimental data. Surface relaxations and the electronic states near valence band gap are discussed in details for all three perovskites. © 2004 Elsevier Ltd and Techna Group S.r.l. All rights reserved.
Microstructure and mechanical properties of plasma spraying coatings from YSZ feedstocks comprising nano-and submicron-sized particles
2015
Atmospheric plasma spraying (APS) is an attractive technique to obtain nanostructured coatings due to its versatility, simplicity and relatively low cost. However, nanoparticles cannot be fed into the plasma using conventional feeding systems, due to their low mass and poor flowability, and must be adequately reconstituted into sprayable micrometric agglomerates. In this work, nanostructured and submicron/nanostiuctured powders of yttria-stabilised zirconia (YSZ) were deposited using APS, with a view to obtaining high-performance thermal bather coatings (IBC). All powders were reconstituted by spray-drying from different solid loading suspensions, followed by a thermal treatment of the spra…
Enhanced bistability by guest inclusion in Fe(ii) spin crossover porous coordination polymers
2012
Inclusion of thiourea guest molecules in the tridimensional spin crossover porous coordination polymers {[Fe(pyrazine)[M(CN)(4)]} (M = Pd, Pt) leads to novel clathrates exhibiting unprecedented large thermal hysteresis loops of ca. 60 K wide centered near room temperature.
A Raman spectroscopy study of the oxidation processes in synthetic chromite FeCr2O4
2020
Abstract A crystal of synthetic chromite FeCr2O4 has been annealed in air at 700 °C for 50 days at room pressure in order to study physical-chemical changes. After the annealing treatment, Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) images of the polished surface of the sample showed areas of different composition. Detailed Raman mapping revealed that the annealed chromite undergoes an oxidation process, proceeding inwards from the outer surface and leading to the transformation of chromite to magnetite, and ultimately to hematite. The oxidation process also leads to the formation of trellis-like lines, arguably via stress-related mechanisms associated with the phase transformation and consequent vo…
[Cu(tn)]3[Cr(CN)6]2·3H2O: A unique two-dimensional Cu-Cr cyano-bridged ferromagnet (tn = 1,3-diaminopropane)
2002
Reaction of the two-coordinate ‘assembling complex-ligand’ [Cu(tn)]2+ with the building block [Cr(CN)6]32 leads to a unique two-dimensional Cu–Cr cyano-bridged ferromagnet with unusual m3- and m4-bridging [Cu(tn)]2+ units. Gomez Garcia, Carlos Jose, Carlos.Gomez@uv.es
Luminescence of phosphorus doped silica glass
2017
This work is supported by Material Science program IMIS2 of Latvia.
Multi-scale analysis to determine fibre/matrix debonding criteria in SiCTitanium composites with and without consideration of the manufacturing resid…
1998
Abstract Certain dissipative phenomena in long-fibre composites are still quite poorly understood, especially the debonding between the fibre and the matrix. The present study is an attempt to elucidate this phenomenon in SiC Titanium metal-matrix composites. The phenomenon is analysed both experimentally and numerically, both on the scale of the constituents and on the scale of the equivalent homogeneous material. This leads to the identification of a local debonding criterion which helps to determine a global debonding criterion. This approach is made for two cases, without and without consideration of the manufacturing residual stresses.