B4C-TiB2 Composite Ceramics Offer Tailored Electrical, Mechanical Traits

Tsinghua University Press

In recent years, electro-conductive composite ceramics have gradually become a research hotspot in the functionalization of structural ceramics. However, the improvement of conductivity generally achieved at the cost of increasing the content of conductive phases or sacrificing the mechanical properties of the composite ceramics. Therefore, achieving high conductivity of composite ceramics at low conductive phase content is of great significance. In this study, electrically conductive B4C–TiB2 composite ceramics containing only 15 vol% TiB2 were prepared by a two-step spark plasma sintering process, and their mechanical and electrical performances were adjusted by the optimal particle size coupling of raw material powders.

A team of material scientists led by Songlin Ran from Anhui University of Technology in Maanshan, China recently prepared highly electro-conductive B4C–TiB2 ceramics by a two-step spark plasma sintering method. The three-dimensional interconnected intergranular TiB2 network consisting of large B4C grains and small TiB2 grains established an excellent conductive path for the passing of electrical current, which was beneficial to the improvement of electrical conductivity. Moreover, they have also achieved controllable adjustment of the mechanical and electrical properties of B4C–TiB2 ceramics by the optimal particle size coupling of raw material powders.

The team published their review in Journal of Advanced Ceramics on April 25, 2024.

"In this work, we prepared highly electro-conductive B4C–TiB2 ceramics via a two-step method based on the novel selective matrix grain growth strategy. During the sintering progress, small B4C grains were completely consumed, leaving small TiB2 grains around B4C grains to form the three-dimensional interconnected intergranular TiB2 network. As a result, more conductive channels were formed and thus improving the electrical conductivity of the composites," said Dr. Songlin Ran, the corresponding author of the paper, a professor in the School of Materials Science and Engineering at Anhui University of Technology.

B4C–15 vol% TiB2 composite ceramic prepared from 10.29 µm B4C and 0.05 µm TiC powders exhibited a perfect three-dimensional interconnected conductive network with a maximum electrical conductivity of 4.25×104 S/m, together with excellent mechanical properties including flexural strength, Vickers hardness and fracture toughness of 691±58 MPa, 30.30±0.61 GPa and 5.75±0.32 MPa·m1/2, respectively, while the composite obtained from 3.12 µm B4C and 0.8 µm TiC powders had the best mechanical properties including flexural strength, Vickers hardness and fracture toughness of 827±35 MPa, 32.01±0.51 GPa and 6.45±0.22 MPa·m1/2, together with a decent electrical conductivity of 0.65×104 S/m.

"The method proposed in this paper can prepare highly electro-conductive ceramics at low conductive phase content, which greatly reduces the production cost and also provides a new strategy for the regulation of microstructure and properties of composite ceramics," said Dr. Songlin Ran.

The next step is to restructure the three-dimensional network and construct a more perfect conductive network by introducing ceramic particles, whiskers, fibers, etc. In addition, the effect of the multiple conductive phases on the microstructure, electrical properties and mechanical properties of the composite ceramics need to be investigated in detail to reveal the conductive mechanism.

Other contributors include Jun Zhao, Xingshuo Zhang, Zongning Ma, Dong Wang and Xing Jin from Anhui University of Technology in Maanshan, China; and Chaohu University in Hefei, China.

This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Nos. 52072003 and 52002003), the Natural Science Foundation of Anhui Provincial Education Department (Nos. 2023AH052095 and KJ2021A0405), and the Natural Science Foundation of Anhui Province (No. 2208085QE146).


About Journal of Advanced Ceramics

Journal of Advanced Ceramics (JAC) is an international journal that presents the state-of-the-art results of theoretical and experimental studies on the processing, structure, and properties of advanced ceramics and ceramic-based composites. JAC is Fully Open Access, monthly published by Tsinghua University Press on behalf of the State Key Laboratory of New Ceramics and Fine Processing (Tsinghua University) and the Advanced Ceramics Division of the Chinese Ceramic Society, and exclusively available via SciOpen. JAC has been indexed in SCIE (IF = 16.9, top 1/28, Q1), Scopus, and Ei Compendex.

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