Nano Structured Electronic & Magnetic Materials
Nano Structured Electronic & Magnetic Materials
Nano Structured Electronic & Magnetic Materials
materials
1. Introduction
4. Processing methods
Plasma processing:
A non-transferred arc thermal plasma reactor has been used to vapor-ize
coarse metal powders. A supersonic nozzle is used to quench the powder, and
the powders are collected in a filter system that can be sealed and dismantled
in a glove box. A drawback of the process is oxidation during fine powder
handling.
i) Combustion process:
The combustion process utilizes oxidizers and fuels. In controlled
environments, high temperatures can be generated by the exothermic redox
reactions between decomposition products of the oxidizer and the fuel.
Owing to the fast heating and cooling, there is nucleation of crystallites but
little growth, resulting in nanocrys-talline ceramics. Some of the process
features are as below.
(a) It is a versatile process leading to the synthesis of single
phase, solid solutions, and composites as well as complex
compound oxide phases.
(b) It uses cheap raw materials.
(c) It is a scalable and high production rate process.
(d) The products are of high purity and loosely agglomerated,
resulting in high sinter-ability.
ii) Mechanical alloying:
A high-energy ball milling process has been used to produce nanos-
tructured powders.
Rapid solidification processing – Amorphous alloys to be produced by a
variety of rapid solidification processing routes with cooling rates > 104 K/s
for eutectic alloys.
Solidification processing of bulk amorphous alloys – Bulk amorphous
alloys are formed by more conventional solidification routes at slower
cooling rates.
Crystallisation of amorphous precursors – Bulk alloys with
nanocrystalline grains can also be produced by solid state (crystallisation)
of an amorphous precursor.
i) Spray Methods:
The melt is fragmented into droplets prior to quenching. Powder is produced
by this method. The mechanism of atomisation and the means of cooling can
be different in different techniques. Some atomisation methods are by gas,
water, ultrasonic, rotating, soluble gas, electrohydrodynamic, spark erosion,
and twin roll means.
(ii)Chill Methods:
The continuity of the melt is preserved up to and during quenching. This is
achieved by bringing the melt into contact with a chilling substrate. Various
methods involve injecting the melt into a die cavity, forming the melt into a
thin section by forging between a hammer or piston and an anvil, extruding the
melt on to a chilled surface or extraction of the melt by contact with a rotating
disc. Some chill methods are by using dies, piston and anvil, twin roller
quenching, free flight melt spinning, chill block melt spinning, planar flow
casting, and melt overflow.
References