Influence of a grain-locking morphology on properties of doped ZrO2 ceramics made with ultrafine (~ 3 nm) nanoparticles
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Abstract
The use of ultrafine (~ 3 nm) nanoparticles of 10 mol.% CaO-doped ZrO2 together with a minimum dwelling time (15 min.) during pressureless sintering yielded high (> 99%)-density ceramic with a unique grain-locking microstructure; no impurity or second phase segregation was observed in the ‘locked’ regions. Although the normal X-ray diffraction data indicated a phase-pure cubic symmetry for the ceramic, Rietveld analysis confirmed a cubic-phase majority (~ 83%) with minor tetragonal content (~ 17%). The microstructure (homogeneously present on both top and interior of ceramics) for the sintered ceramics contributed in achieving high hardness (~ 14 GPa); obtained hardness and indentation toughness values were also comparable to the previously reported cubic ZrO2 ceramics (doped with Y2O3). Considering the high cost of yttria-doped zirconia systems, the suitability with mechanical properties together with high sintered density for the present system suggests its potential usability at larger scales as an alternative to Y2O3-stabilized zirconia ceramics. Graphical abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.] © 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to The Materials Research Society.