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Electrospinning of ceramic nanofibers
by Eick, Benjamin M., Ph.D., Purdue University, 2008, 165 pages; AAT 3332307

Abstract (Summary)

Silicon Carbide (SiC) nanofibers of diameters as low as 20 nm are fabricated. The fibers were produced through the electrostatic spinning of the preceramic poly(carbomethylsilane) with pyrolysis to ceramic. A new technique was used where the preceramic was blended with polystyrene (PS) and, subsequent to electrospinning, was exposed to UV to crosslink the PS and prevent fibers flowing during pyrolysis. Electrospun SiC fibers were characterized by FTIR, TGA-DTA, SEM, TEM, XRD, and SAED. Fibers were shown to be polycrystalline and nanograined with α-SiC 15R polytype being dominant, where commercial fiber production methods form β-SiC 3C. Pyrolysis of the bulk polymer blend to SiC produced α-SiC 15R as the dominant polytype with larger grains showing that electrospinning nanofibers affects resultant crystallinity. Fibers produced were shown to have a core-shell structure of an oxide scale that was variable by pyrolysis conditions.

Metal oxide powders (chromium oxide, cobalt oxide, iron oxide, silicon oxide, tantalum oxide, titanium oxide, tungsten oxide, vanadium oxide, and zirconium oxide), were converted to metal carbide powders and metal nitride powders by the process of carbothermal reduction (CTR). Synthetic pitch was explored as an alternative to graphite which is a common carbon source for CTR. It was shown via characterization with XRD that pitch performs as well and in some cases better than graphite and is therefore a viable alternative in CTR.

Conversion of metal oxide powders with pitch led to conversion of sol-gel based metal oxide nanofibers produced by electrospinning. Pitch was soluble in the solutions xv that were electrospun allowing for intimate contact between the sol-gel and the carbon source for CTR. This method became a two step processing method to produce metal carbide and nitride nanofibers: first electrospin sol-gel based metal oxide nanofibers and subsequently pyrolize them in the manner of CTR to transform them. Results indicate that this method was capable of transforming hafnium, niobium, tantalum, titanium, vanadium, and zirconium sol-gel nanofibers to metal carbides and nitrides.

Indexing (document details)

Advisor:Youngblood, Jeffrey
Committee members:Trice, Rodney,  Sands, Timothy,  Sun, Chin-The
School:Purdue University
Department:Materials Engineering
School Location:United States -- Indiana
Keyword(s):Electrospinning, Ceramic, Nanofibers, Silicon carbide, Poly(carbomethylsilane)
Source:DAI-B 69/10, p. 6349, Apr 2009
Source type:Dissertation
Subjects:Materials science
Publication Number: AAT 3332307
ISBN:9780549829447
Document URL:http://proquest.umi.com/pqdlink?did=1662993431&Fmt=7&clientI d=79356&RQT=309&VName=PQD
ProQuest document ID:1662993431


 

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