scholarly journals HIGHLY POROUS GRANULATED CORUNDUM AGGREGATE PREPARED OUT OF ALUMINA-POLYSTYRENE-FOAM MIXTURE. PARTS 1 AND 2

Author(s):  
V. N. Sokov
Author(s):  
Ning Zhang ◽  
Yunfei Qi ◽  
Suhuan Tian ◽  
Yue Wang ◽  
Ping Cui ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
V. N. Sokov

The results of the raw corundum pellets drying condition investigation confrmed completely the supposition that the alumina-polystyrene-foam mixtures have the low sensitivity to the drying conditions. This fact allowed to combine the drying and the fring in one thermal vessel. As the vigorous evolution of the hydrolysis products and the polystyrene foam burning can damage the raw pellets, the heating rate should be set so that to give the gaseous products time to diffuse out of the material without breaching its structure. The well-targeted fring scheduler is proposed in the article.Ill.5.


Author(s):  
V. N. Sokov

Fractional composition of the corundum pellets is defined mostly by the polystyrene foam balls grading, by the mixture moisture, and by the granulation's parameters. The using of the high dynamic packing loading influences negatively on the production quality. The plate' rotation frequency, its angle and the granulation time were established in the article. The conditions of the hollow pellets production on base of the technical alumina were developed.


Author(s):  
V. N. Sokov

The investigating results are given for the strength capabilities of both the separate fractions and the fraction-based mixtures. It was established that to decrease the flling materials' heat conductivity the diameter of the pellets should be reduced or the density of the poly-disperse composition should be increased. The introducing of the corundum flling with grain size of not more than 60 micrometers into the batch's composition raises the pellets' thermal stability.Ill.5. Tab. 3.


Author(s):  
Steven D. Toteda

Zirconia oxygen sensors, in such applications as power plants and automobiles, generally utilize platinum electrodes for the catalytic reaction of dissociating O2 at the surface. The microstructure of the platinum electrode defines the resulting electrical response. The electrode must be porous enough to allow the oxygen to reach the zirconia surface while still remaining electrically continuous. At low sintering temperatures, the platinum is highly porous and fine grained. The platinum particles sinter together as the firing temperatures are increased. As the sintering temperatures are raised even further, the surface of the platinum begins to facet with lower energy surfaces. These microstructural changes can be seen in Figures 1 and 2, but the goal of the work is to characterize the microstructure by its fractal dimension and then relate the fractal dimension to the electrical response. The sensors were fabricated from zirconia powder stabilized in the cubic phase with 8 mol% percent yttria. Each substrate was sintered for 14 hours at 1200°C. The resulting zirconia pellets, 13mm in diameter and 2mm in thickness, were roughly 97 to 98 percent of theoretical density. The Engelhard #6082 platinum paste was applied to the zirconia disks after they were mechanically polished ( diamond). The electrodes were then sintered at temperatures ranging from 600°C to 1000°C. Each sensor was tested to determine the impedance response from 1Hz to 5,000Hz. These frequencies correspond to the electrode at the test temperature of 600°C.


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