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Nanometric powders and sintered ceramics studied by atomic force microscopy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 January 2011
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Atomic force microscopy, as well as the Brunauer, Emmett, and Teller technique and x-ray diffraction, was used to analyze ultrafine NiZn ferrite powders hydrothermally synthesized at 200 °C, for 5 h. The particle sizes, measured through AFM images acquired from the surface of pressed powders, were 52 ± 6 nm, which were higher than those obtained by the other techniques. The particles were monodispersed in size and approximately spherical, meeting the requirements for the production of high density sintered components. The observations performed on ceramic bodies sintered at different conditions (1100–1400 °C, 5 to 240 min) showed necks characteristic of the early stages of sintering (1100 °C) and the expected pore curvature evolution (1400 °C) with sintering time in the final stage of the sintering process. Using a straightforward sample preparation technique, AFM proved to be a powerful tool for direct analysis of ceramic powder particles on the nanometric scale and sintered ceramics at different sintering stages.
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