Forming Textured Microstructures via the Gelcasting Technique
- 1 October 1997
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of the American Ceramic Society
- Vol. 80 (10) , 2725-2729
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1151-2916.1997.tb03184.x
Abstract
Crystallographically textured samples of iron titanate were produced by gelcasting in the presence of a strong magnetic field. Texture was assessed by measuring X‐ray pole figures on samples that were cast in different orientations relative to the applied field. Specimens in this study exhibit fiber‐type texture, with the b‐axes aligned parallel to the applied field. Peak texture strengths were on the order of 3 and 48 multiples of a random distribution (MRD) when processed in a 3.2 and 8.4 T magnetic field, respectively. This study shows that a combination of gelcasting with magnetic‐field‐assisted processing provides a convenient method for fabricating samples which can be used to study the role of crystallographic texture on the physical properties of polycrystalline ceramics, e.g., their elastic or fracture behavior.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Development of Textured Microstructures in Ceramics with Large Thermal Expansion AnisotropyJournal of the American Ceramic Society, 1994
- Gelcasting of AluminaJournal of the American Ceramic Society, 1991
- Operational texture analysisMaterials Science and Engineering: A, 1991
- Magnetic field alignment of high-T c superconductorsRBa2Cu3O7?? (R=rare earth)Applied Physics A, 1988
- Some basic concepts of texture analysis and comparison of three methods to calculate orientation distributions from pole figuresJournal of Applied Crystallography, 1988
- Superconducting properties of aligned crystalline grains ofPhysical Review B, 1987
- On the Reproduction of the Orientation Distribution Function of Texturized Samples from Reduced Pole Figures Using the Conception of a Conditional Ghost CorrectionPhysica Status Solidi (b), 1982
- Is Fe2TiO5 an anisotropic spin glass?Journal of Magnetism and Magnetic Materials, 1980
- Anisotropic Spin-Glass Behavior inTiPhysical Review Letters, 1979
- Preferred Orientation in Ceramic Materials due to Forming TechniquesPublished by Springer Nature ,1964