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Effect of calcination temperatures on HfO2 fibers via electrospinning

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Abstract Hafnium oxide (HfO2) fibers can be widely used in ultra-high temperature ceramics (UHTCs) as reinforced material in order to achieve better antioxidant performance and less cracks and flaking on… Click to show full abstract

Abstract Hafnium oxide (HfO2) fibers can be widely used in ultra-high temperature ceramics (UHTCs) as reinforced material in order to achieve better antioxidant performance and less cracks and flaking on surface of UHTCs in field of ultra-high temperature thermal protectors. Calcination temperature is one of essential parameters for forming HfO2 fiber. In this work, one-dimensional (HfO2) fibers were prepared through the electrospinning method and further post-calcination treatment. During the calcination treatment, the monoclinic-HfO2 (m-HfO2) was formed from as-spun HfO2 fibers at 432°C, and only a small amount of m-HfO2 was converted into the tetragonal HfO2 at 1013°C, which can increase the fiber density and decrease the grain size. However, the remaining m-HfO2 was directly converted into the cubic HfO2 at 1351°C. The unique temperatures of forming monoclinic, tetragonal, cubic phase were much lower than the phase-transition temperature. The prepared HfO2 fiber could still maintain fibrous morphology after 10 times cyclic thermal shock in air. Moreover, the fibers calcined at 900°C and 1200°C have better thermal shock resistance for their stable phase and fibrous morphology with uniform grain growth after the thermal shock test.

Keywords: thermal shock; temperature; effect calcination; hfo2; hfo2 fibers

Journal Title: Ceramics International
Year Published: 2020

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