Mj. Mayo et al., Surface chemistry effects on the processing and superplastic properties ofnanocrystalline oxide ceramics, NANOSTR MAT, 11(2), 1999, pp. 271-282
The unusual bulk behavior of nanoparticle and nanograined systems often ori
ginates in surface chemistry effects. Three examples are used to illustrate
this point. In the first, newly precipitated nanocrystalline titania is wa
shed with ethanol, and the mixture of these two supposedly inert substances
causes the titania to lose its anatase crystal structure and become amorph
ous. This phenomenon is attributed to a reverse hydrolysis reaction at the
particle surface. In the second example, nanocrystalline ZrO2-3mol%Y2O3 is
observed to partially dissolve on exposure to pH-adjusted water. due to the
formation of soluble hydroxides at the particle surface. A major consequen
ce of the dissolution is the formation of large, hard, multiparticle agglom
erates on subsequent drying. In the final example. ZrO2-3mol%Y2O3 particles
are intentionally surface-doped with submonolayer levels of Cu-containing
ions from ammoniacal solutions. The ceramics fabricated from such powders e
xhibit superplastic strain rates 100 or so times faster than in comparable
undoped systems, due to the dopant's role in lowering of the activation ene
rgy for diffusion along grain boundaries. (C) 1999 Acta Metallurgica Inc.