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Fundamental principles of spark plasma sintering of metals: part II – about the existence or non-existence of the ‘spark plasma effect’

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ABSTRACT The mechanisms of densification in spark plasma sintering (SPS) were investigated both analytically and numerically for a model system of two spherical metallic powder particles. From the microscopic temperature… Click to show full abstract

ABSTRACT The mechanisms of densification in spark plasma sintering (SPS) were investigated both analytically and numerically for a model system of two spherical metallic powder particles. From the microscopic temperature distribution, the possibility of a micro-local overheating of the particle–particle contacts was analysed for different particle sizes, contact geometries, materials, and electrical loads. It is shown that, for particles below the size of one millimetre, local overheating is below one Kelvin. Subsequently, the material transport by thermomigration, electromigration, and diffusion driven by surface curvature and external pressure was derived from microscopic field distributions obtained from analytical calculations and finite-element simulations. The results show that, while the mechanical pressure accelerates material transport by orders of magnitude, the electrical current and the temperature gradients do not. It is also shown that pulsing the current has no significant influence on the densification rate.

Keywords: fundamental principles; plasma sintering; existence; spark plasma

Journal Title: Powder Metallurgy
Year Published: 2020

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