1 / 21

38 th ICACC Daytona Beach Conference 26 th - 31 st January, 2014

Assessing the Carbon Concentration in Boron Carbide: A Combined X-Ray Diffraction and Chemical Analysis. Kanak Kuwelkar, Vladislav Domnich, Richard Haber. 38 th ICACC Daytona Beach Conference 26 th - 31 st January, 2014. OUTLINE.

mirra
Download Presentation

38 th ICACC Daytona Beach Conference 26 th - 31 st January, 2014

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Assessing the Carbon Concentration in Boron Carbide: A Combined X-Ray Diffraction and Chemical Analysis Kanak Kuwelkar, Vladislav Domnich, Richard Haber 38th ICACC Daytona Beach Conference 26th - 31st January, 2014

  2. OUTLINE • Current understanding of the variations in the boron carbide stoichiometry based on • literature. • Determination of the various phases present in commercial boron carbide • and quantification based on Rietveld refinement. • Investigation of the variation in the carbon concentration of commercial/standard and • RU produced dense boron rich boron carbide based on the lattice parameters. • Developing an improved methodology for the determination of the free carbon • content by X-ray diffraction. • Chemical characterization of selected commercial/standard and RU powders. • Stoichiometric variations in commercial boron carbide samples based on chemical • analysis and X-ray diffraction.

  3. BORON CARBIDE:CRYSTAL STRUCTURE • Rhombohedral symmetry with single phase • carbon has a solubility varying from ~8 at% • to ~20 at%. • The unit cell consists of B11C icosahedra • and C-B-C intericosahedral chains for 20 • at% carbon. • Variations in the carbon concentrations • have been estimated to B4.3C, B3.6C and • B4.0 on the carbon rich side. • Schwetz proposed the limit of the B:C ratio • to be B4.3C on the carbon rich side based • on combined chemical analysis and EPMA. 18.8 • Seminar on boron carbide, 23.01.2003.,Schwetz.K , • Schewtz.K., J. Less-Common Met.,1991.175: p. 1-11 , • Conde, O.,et al, Surface and Coatings Technology, 2000. 125(1): p. 141-146. , • Domnich, V., et al.,JECerS., 2011. 94(11): p. 3605-3628.

  4. PHASE IDENTIFICATION OF COMMERCIAL SAMPLES Phase Identification of SG-010813 (Superior Graphite) and quantitative analysis by Rietveld Refinement B4C-97.5% Graphite-2.5% Intensity (Counts) Boron Carbide Graphite Two-theta(deg)

  5. 0 Phase Identification of Pad-Tile 8 (Coorstek) and quantitative analysis by Rietveld Refinement B4C-96.9% Graphite-0.3% Aluminum Nitride-0.4% Boron Nitride-0.3% Intensity (Counts) Boron Carbide Graphite Aluminum Nitride Boron Nitride Two-theta(deg)

  6. VARIATION IN LATTICE PARAMETERS OF COMMERCIAL SAMPLES c lattice parameter (Å) a lattice parameter (Å) Superior Graphite sample ESK sample Ceradyne sample Superior Graphite sample ESK sample Ceradyne sample % Carbon Concentration % Carbon Concentration • Aselage, T.L. and R.G. Tissot, . J. Am. Ceram. Soc., 1992. 75(8): p. 2207-2212.

  7. X-RAY DIFFRACTION PATTERNS OF DENSE BORON RICH SAMPLES 35% Excess Boron Intensity (Counts) 25% Excess Boron 10% Excess Boron 5% Excess Boron 1% Excess Boron Two-theta(deg) MAJOR BORON CARBIDE PEAKS No Free Carbon Peak 35% Excess Boron 35% Excess Boron 25% Excess Boron 25% Excess Boron 10% Excess Boron Intensity (Counts) 10% Excess Boron Intensity (Counts) 5% Excess Boron 5% Excess Boron 1% Excess Boron 1% Excess Boron Peak Shift Two-theta(deg) Two-theta(deg)

  8. VARIATION IN LATTICE PARAMETERS OF DENSE BORON RICH SAMPLES a lattice parameter (Å) c lattice parameter (Å) 1% Excess Boron 5% Excess Boron 10% Excess Boron 25% Excess Boron 35% Excess Boron 1% Excess Boron 5% Excess Boron 10% Excess Boron 25% Excess Boron 35% Excess Boron % Carbon Concentration % Carbon Concentration • Aselage, T.L. and R.G. Tissot, . J. Am. Ceram. Soc., 1992. 75(8): p. 2207-2212.

  9. OVIERVIEW OF THE CURRENT CHARACTERIZATION TECHNIQUES USED FREE CARBON : Spiking technique or Rietveld refinement TOTAL CARBON : Combustion of total carbon followed by detection of carbon by infrared detection (CS 230) TOTAL OXYGEN : Combustion of total oxygen followed by detection of oxygen by infrared detection (TC 600) TOTAL NITROGEN : Combustion of total nitrogen followed by detection of nitrogen by thermal conductivity detection (TC 600) TOTAL BORON : Boric acid titration after dissolution of boron carbide in molten sodium carbonate

  10. METHODS FOR THE DETERMINATION OF THE FREE CARBON CONTENT • Combustion methods can be used but the boron carbide will oxidize at the same • rate as the carbon and the formed oxide will seal some of the free carbon. • In the wet chemical oxidation method, the rate of oxidation of free carbon and • carbon in boron carbide will be too similar to differentiate for superfine boron carbide • powders. • The spiking or the addition techniqueis used to determine the amount of free • carbon where the free carbon is less than 5% by weight. • Beauvy, M. et al, J. Less-Common Met., 1981. 80(2): p. 227-233. • Schwetz, K. et al, J. Less-Common Met., 1986. 117(1–2): p. 7-15. • Alizadeh, A.et al, J European Cer Soc, 2004. 24(10): p. 3227-3234.

  11. FREE CARBON CONTENT BY THE SPIKING TECHNIQUE (M.BEAUVY & R.ANGERS) Powder A Powder A (after grinding) • Spiking technique involves determining • the free carbon content less than 10% • from the ratio of the intensities of the • carbon and boron carbide peaks. • Linear relationship exists between free • carbon and boron carbide peak. • This technique can be used only if the • carbon is completely crystallized as • graphite. • Beauvy, M. et al, J. Less-Common Met., 1981. 80(2): p. 227-233.

  12. MODELLING THE ASSYMETRY OF THE CARBON PEAK ST-HD20 (H.C.STARCK) SAMPLE WITH 0.5% ADDED CARBON Experimental Pattern Derived Pattern Boron Carbide Peak Intensity (Counts) Carbon Peak Two-Theta (deg) CARBON PEAK Experimental Pattern Derived Pattern 3) Graphitic Peak 2) Disordered Carbon Peak Intensity (Counts) 1) Amorphous Peak Two-Theta (deg)

  13. MODELLING THE ASSYMETRY OF THE CARBON PEAK ATD-2012-6-41 CERADYNE INC. SAMPLE WITH 0.5% ADDED CARBON Experimental Pattern Derived Pattern Boron Carbide Peak Intensity (Counts) Carbon Peak Two-Theta (deg) CARBON PEAK Experimental Pattern Derived Pattern 3) Graphitic Peak 2) Disordered Carbon Peak Intensity (Counts) 1) Amorphous Peak Kα2 Peak Two-Theta (deg)

  14. VARIATION IN THE FREE CARBON BASED ON BACKGROUND SUBTRACTED 1) Cubic Spline Carbon Peak Boron Carbide Peak Background 1 IC/IB4C = 0.17 IC/IB4C = 0.20 Background 2 2) Linear Carbon Peak Boron Carbide Peak IC/IB4C = 0.15

  15. FREE CARBON CONTENT ST-HD20 ST-HD20 (H.C.STARCK) SAMPLE Free Carbon = 0.96% ATD-2012-6-41 (CERADYNE INC.) SAMPLE ATD-2012-6-41 Free Carbon = 2.78%

  16. CHEMICAL ANALYSIS OF COMMERCIAL BORON CARBIDE SAMPLES Oxygen/Nitrogen Analyser (TC600) Carbon/SulphurAnalyser (CS230) http://www.cesaroni.com/industries/medical/Leco_Corporation_TC600- 500_Nitrogen_Oxygen_Determinator.php http://www.leco.com/products/analytical-sciences/carbon-sulfur-analyzers/230-series

  17. DETERMINATION OF THE STOICHIOMETRY Step 1 Step 2 Chemical Analysis(LECO) Total Oxygen Total Nitrogen Boron Titration Total Boron Total Boron = Boron in Boron Carbide + Boron in Boron Nitride + Boron in Boron Oxide Total Carbon = Carbon in Boron Carbide + Free Carbon Step 3 Step 4 X-Ray Diffraction (Spiking Technique) Free Carbon Chemical Analysis(LECO) Total Carbon Stoichiometry of Boron Carbide = Moles of Boron in Boron carbide Moles of Carbon in Boron carbide

  18. VARIATION IN THE STOICHIOMETRY OF COMMERCIAL SAMPLES

  19. CONCLUSIONS AND FUTURE WORK • Improvement of the correlation of the bound carbon concentrations to the • lattice parameters. • Improvement and establishment of a standardized procedure for the • characterization of boron carbide. • Development of a novel technique for the determination of the free carbon. • Validation of the stoichiometry of the commercial/RU produced boron • carbide samples with the aid of electron microprobe analysis. • The goal is to establish the preferred composition and purity of boron carbide • for extreme environments and to develop a standardized procedure to • analyze boron carbide samples.

  20. Acknowledgements Thank You Ceramic, Composite, and Optical Materials Center

More Related