Oxidation of Hafnium Carbide in the Temperature Range 1400° to 2060°C
- 1 April 1993
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of the American Ceramic Society
- Vol. 76 (4) , 1040-1046
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1151-2916.1993.tb05332.x
Abstract
After hafnium carbide has been oxidized at temperatures in the range of 1400° to 2060°C, three distinct layers are present in the film cross section: (a) a residual carbide layer with dissolved oxygen in the lattice, (b) a dense‐appearing oxide interlayer containing carbon, and (c) a porous outer layer of hafnium oxide. Experimental measurements of layer thicknesses and oxygen concentrations are combined with an extended formulation of moving‐boundary diffusion theory to obtain the diffusion constants of oxygen in each of the three layers. The results indicate that the oxide interlayer is a better diffusion barrier for oxygen than either of the other layers. Based on X‐ray microanalysis, X‐ray diffraction, and resistance measurements, the interlayer is an oxygen‐deficient oxide of hafnium with a carbon impurity. The interlayer hardness equals that of the residual carbide layer.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- X-ray microanalysis of a hafnium carbide film oxidized at high temperatureSurface and Coatings Technology, 1988
- Synthesis and hot-pressing of single-phase ZrCxOy and two-phase ZrCxOyZrO2 materialsInternational Journal of High Technology Ceramics, 1986
- ber das pseudotern re System ?HfO??HfN?HfCMonatshefte für Chemie / Chemical Monthly, 1975
- The Svstern Zirconia‐HafniaJournal of the American Ceramic Society, 1968
- Diffusion of Carbon through Zirconium MonocarbideJournal of Applied Physics, 1967
- High-Temperature OxidationJournal of the Electrochemical Society, 1967
- Permeability of Zirconia, Hafnia, and Thoria to OxygenJournal of the American Ceramic Society, 1966
- The crystal structure of ZrO2 and HfO2Acta Crystallographica, 1959
- Hafnium Oxide, HfO2 (Monoclinic)Analytical Chemistry, 1953
- Unsteady-state diffusion or heat-conduction with moving boundaryTransactions of the Faraday Society, 1950