Silicon oxycarbide glasses: Part I. Preparation and chemistry
- 1 December 1991
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Journal of Materials Research
- Vol. 6 (12) , 2716-2722
- https://doi.org/10.1557/jmr.1991.2716
Abstract
Silicone polymers were pyrolyzed to form silicon oxycarbides that contained only silicon, oxygen, and carbon. The starting polymers were mainly methyl trichlorosilane with a small amount of dimethyl dichlorosilane. NMR showed that the polymers had a silicon-oxygen backbone with branching and ring units. When the polymer was heated in hydrogen, toluene and isopropyl alcohol, used in production of the polymer, were given off in the temperature range 150 °C to 500 °C. Substantial decomposition of the polymer itself began only above about 700°by evolution of methane. The network of silicon-oxygen bonds and silicon-carbon bonds did not react and was preserved; the silicon-carbon bonds were linked into the silicon-oxygen network. The silicon oxycarbide was stable above 1000 °C, showing no dimensional changes above this temperature. The interior of the silicon oxycarbide was at very low effective oxygen pressure because oxygen diffused slowly in it. There was also a protective layer of silicon dioxide on the surface of the silicon oxycarbide.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dimethyldiethoxysilane/tetraethoxysilane copolymers: precursors for the silicon-carbon-oxygen systemChemistry of Materials, 1989
- Oxidation of Silicon: Tests of MechanismsPublished by Springer Nature ,1988
- Structure and chemistry of fibre-matrix interfaces in silicon carbide fibre-reinforced glass-ceramic composites: an electron microscopy studyJournal of Materials Science, 1987
- Ceramics Via Polymer PyrolysisdaggerAnnual Review of Materials Science, 1984
- Thermal stability of SiC fibres (Nicalon )Journal of Materials Science, 1984
- Increase of Annealing Point of 96% SiO2 Glass on Incorporation of CarbonJournal of the American Ceramic Society, 1976
- CONTINUOUS SILICON CARBIDE FIBER OF HIGH TENSILE STRENGTHChemistry Letters, 1975
- SiliconesPublished by Springer Nature ,1973
- Solution and diffusion of helium and neon in tridymite and cristobaliteTransactions of the Faraday Society, 1967
- A Thermodynamic Analysis of the High-temperature Vaporization Properties of Silica.Chemical Reviews, 1960