Titanium-group nano-whiskers and method of production
11724310 · 2023-08-15
Assignee
Inventors
- Paul A. Menchhofer (Clinton, TN)
- Roland D. Seals (Oak Ridge, TN, US)
- James O. Kiggans, Jr. (Oak Ridge, TN, US)
Cpc classification
C22C47/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C23C16/4417
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B22F2301/205
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F1/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B22F1/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F1/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C22C32/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C22C47/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C30B25/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
Disclosed herein are structures comprising a titanium, zirconium, or hafnium powder particle with titanium carbide, zirconium carbide, or hafnium carbide (respectively) nano-whiskers grown directly from and anchored to the powder particle. Also disclosed are methods for fabrication of such structures, involving heating the powder particles and exposing the particles to an organic gas.
Claims
1. A titanium-group structure comprising: a titanium-group powder particle having a plurality of titanium-group nano-whiskers jointlessly extending from the titanium-group powder particle by being grown directly from the titanium-group powder particle.
2. The titanium-group structure of claim 1 wherein the titanium-group powder particle has a maximum dimension of about 500 microns and the plurality of titanium group nano-whiskers have a maximum diameter of about one hundred nanometers and a length that is at least about one hundred nanometers.
3. The titanium-group structure of claim 1 wherein the titanium-group powder particle comprises titanium and the plurality of titanium group nano-whiskers comprise titanium carbide.
4. The titanium-group structure of claim 1 wherein the titanium-group powder particle comprises zirconium and the plurality of titanium-group nano-whiskers comprise zirconium carbide.
5. The titanium-group structure of claim 1 wherein the titanium-group powder particle comprises hafnium and the plurality of titanium-group nano-whiskers comprise hafnium carbide.
6. The titanium-group structure of claim 1 wherein the titanium-group powder particle comprises any combination of titanium, zirconium, and hafnium.
7. The titanium-group structure of claim 6 wherein the titanium group nano-whiskers comprise any combination of titanium carbide, zirconium carbide, and hafnium carbide.
8. The titanium-group structure of claim 1 wherein the plurality of titanium-group nano-whiskers each have a tapered structure.
9. The titanium-group structure of claim 1 wherein the titanium-group powder particle has a dimension that is at least one micron.
10. The titanium-group structure of claim 1 wherein the plurality of titanium-group nano-whiskers each have a maximum diameter of about ten nanometers and a length that is in a range from about five hundred nanometers to about one thousand nanometers.
11. The titanium-group structure of claim 1 wherein the plurality of titanium-group nano-whiskers include face-centered cubic crystalline titanium-group nano-whiskers.
12. A titanium-group structure consisting of a titanium-group powder particle having a plurality of titanium-group nano-whiskers jointlessly extending from the titanium-group powder particle.
13. The titanium-group structure of claim 12 wherein the titanium-group powder particle has a maximum dimension of about 500 microns and the plurality of titanium group nano-whiskers have a maximum diameter of about one hundred nanometers and a length that is at least about one hundred nanometers.
14. The titanium-group structure of claim 12 wherein the titanium-group powder particle comprises titanium and the plurality of titanium group nano-whiskers comprise titanium carbide.
15. The titanium-group structure of claim 12 wherein the titanium-group powder particle comprises zirconium and the plurality of titanium-group nano-whiskers comprise zirconium carbide.
16. The titanium-group structure of claim 12 wherein the titanium-group powder particle comprises hafnium and the plurality of titanium-group nano-whiskers comprise hafnium carbide.
17. The titanium-group structure of claim 12 wherein the titanium-group powder particle comprises any combination of titanium, zirconium, and hafnium and the titanium group nano-whiskers comprise any combination of titanium carbide, zirconium carbide, and hafnium carbide.
18. The titanium-group structure of claim 12 wherein the plurality of titanium-group nano-whiskers each have a tapered structure.
19. The titanium-group structure of claim 12 wherein the titanium-group powder particle has a dimension that is at least one micron.
20. The titanium-group structure of claim 12 wherein the plurality of titanium-group nano-whiskers each have a maximum diameter of about ten nanometers and a length that is in a range from about five hundred nanometers to about one thousand nanometers.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Various advantages are apparent by reference to the detailed description in conjunction with the figures, wherein elements are not to scale so as to more clearly show the details, wherein like reference numbers indicate like elements throughout the several views, and wherein:
(2)
(3)
(4)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(5) In the following detailed description of the preferred and other embodiments, reference is made to the accompanying drawings, which form a part hereof, and within which are shown by way of illustration the practice of specific embodiments of refractory particulate structure and methods of forming refractory particulate structures. It is to be understood that other embodiments may be utilized, and that structural changes may be made and processes may vary in other embodiments.
(6) Whiskers are crystalline structures that may be formed at nano-scale and/or micro-scale and/or milli-scale dimensions. “Nano-scale” refers to a dimension that is between approximately one Angstrom (0.1 nanometer) and approximately 100 nanometers (0.1 micrometer). “Micro-scale” generally refers to a dimension on the order of a micrometer and “milli-scale” generally refers to a dimension on the order of a milli-meter. However, in order to avoid discontinuities between various dimensional ranges used herein, the term “micro-scale” as used herein refers to a dimension that is between approximately 100 nanometers and 100 micrometers and as used herein the term “milli-scale” refers to a dimension that is between approximately 100 micrometers and 1 millimeter. Nano-, micro-, and milli-scale features may occur in one, two, or three dimensions. For example, a nano-film may be characterized by reference to only one dimension (i.e., its thickness), a nano-tube may be characterized by reference to two dimensions (its diameter and length), and a nano-particle may be characterized by reference to three dimensions (its length, width, and height). Whiskers (such as nano-whiskers) are typically characterized by reference to two dimensions, length and diameter. Whiskers (such as nano-whiskers) are often also characterized by reference to their aspect ratio (length:diameter). Typically, nano-whiskers have an aspect ratio of at least about four. For example, nano-whiskers typically have a diameter of about ten nanometers and a length of at least forty nanometers. However, certain types of nano-whiskers may have smaller diameters, much longer lengths, and an aspect ratio that is less than four or much more than four.
(7) Whiskers (nano-whiskers, micro-whiskers and milli-whiskers) are used as reinforcing structures in materials to increase their strength and toughness. Whiskers provide strength and toughness through such effects as tensile strain resistance, crack deflection, and micro-crack bridging.
(8) The titanium-group carbides, titanium-group oxides, and the titanium-group oxycarbides form nano-whiskers. Such nano-whiskers are referred to herein as titanium-group nano-whiskers. Thus, for example, titanium-group nano-whiskers may be formed as TiC nano-whiskers, or ZrC nano-whiskers, or HfC nano-whiskers, or Ti.sub.mO.sub.n nano-whiskers, or Zr.sub.mO.sub.n nano-whiskers, or Hf.sub.mO.sub.n nano-whiskers, or TiO.sub.xO.sub.y nano-whiskers, or ZrO.sub.xC.sub.y nanowhiskers, or HfO.sub.xC.sub.y nano-whiskers.
(9) Titanium-group carbide nano-whiskers (i.e., TiC nano-whiskers or ZrC nano-whiskers or HfC nano-whiskers) are a particularly useful category of materials. Compared with SiC and Si.sub.3N.sub.4 nano-whiskers and compared with TiC micro-scale or TiC milli-scale whiskers, TiC nano-whiskers offer higher specific strength (especially at high temperatures), increased corrosion resistance, better thermal and electrical properties, and better compatibility with other materials. Titanium-group carbide nano-whiskers may be used to form composite materials that have a high melting point, high hardness, excellent abrasion resistance, good creep resistance, good corrosion resistance, good thermal conductivity, and high thermal shock resistance. These materials have applications in mechanical industries for dies and tooling requiring a high hardness, for cutting tools, for grinding wheels, for coated cutting tips, for coated steel tools. These materials also have application in automotive, aerospace, chemical, and electronics industries. Military applications include uses in graded armor material for ballistic shielding.
(10) Disclosed herein are titanium group nano-whiskers that are anchored to titanium-group powder particles, and methods for their fabrication. For purposes of the present disclosure, the phrase “titanium-group powder particles” refers to powder particles formed from one or more of the titanium-group metals. For purposes of the present disclosure, the term “anchored” refers to the jointless relationship between the titanium-group powder particles and the titanium-group nano-whiskers resulting from the nano-whiskers being grown directly from the powder particles as provided below.
(11) Depicted as an example in
(12) Each Ti powder particle 14 has a plurality of TiC nano-whiskers 18 anchored to the Ti powder particle 14. In the embodiment of
(13)
(14) In Step 110, the chamber is purged with a mixture of inert and reducing gases (such as a mixture of 96% Ar/4% H.sub.2) at a flow rate of about 100-300 cc/min to prevent oxidation of the titanium powder particles and to maintain a reducing atmosphere. A mixture of 96% Ar/4% H.sub.2 is an example of one embodiment of a protective reducing environment. The term “protective reducing environment” is used herein to refer to an environment that protects against oxidation and maintains a reducing atmosphere. A gas environment that includes substantially only argon and hydrogen is an example of a protective reducing environment. The term “inert environment” is used herein to refer to an environment that contains only inert gas with no oxidizing or reducing gas. A gas environment that includes substantially only argon is an example of an inert environment.
(15) The term “controlled environment” is used herein to refer to an environment that is established either as a protective reducing environment or as an inert environment. The relationships of these different environments are summarized in Table 1.
(16) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Controlled Protective Reducing e.g., Inert gas + hydrogen Environment Environment Inert Environment e.g., Inert gas only
(17) Returning to
(18) In Step 130, after the chamber has reached a temperature of about 600° C.-650° C., an organic gas (typically vaporized ethanol) is flowed into the chamber at a rate of about 300 cc/min, while maintaining the chamber temperature at about 600° C.-650° C. and maintaining the purge gas mixture flow, wherein the pressure in the chamber increases to approximately 200 torr. As recognized by persons skilled in the art, ethanol is an example of an alcohol and alcohols are examples of organic compounds. In the embodiment of
(19) The process steps of
(20) As noted above, during step 130, the organic gas is used to “grow” titanium-group nano-whiskers from the titanium-group powder particles. The whiskers are grown directly from the titanium-group powder particles because the powder particles are themselves a source of titanium, zirconium, and/or hafnium that reacts with the organic gas to grow the whiskers from the powder particles. As not all of the titanium-group powder particles are consumed during the growth process, the remaining portion of the powder particles provide the support/substrate for the resulting titanium-group nano-whiskers grown from the powder particles. In other words, the titanium-group powder particles of the present disclosure provide both (a) the support/substrate for the titanium-group nano-whiskers; and (b) a catalyst in the growth process in that the powder particles themselves are a source of titanium, zirconium, or hafnium from which to grow the whiskers. In contrast, prior art processes typically grow nanostructures from catalyst nanoparticles that are merely attached or adhered to a non-catalytic substrate.
(21) As a result of the titanium-group nano-whiskers being grown directly from the titanium-group powder particles (i.e., the whiskers being the result of a chemical reaction of the powder particles and the organic vapor resulting in whiskers growing/extending directly from the powder particles), the resulting nano-whiskers are a jointless extension of the titanium-group powder particle. This jointless (i.e., integrated, unitary, seamless, etc.) structure is highly beneficial in many circumstances because it provides a stronger structural relationship between the whiskers and the substrate than can be accomplished when whiskers are adhered or otherwise attached to a substrate via intervening catalyst particles. Put simply, there is no interface between the powder particles and the nano-whiskers produced according to the present disclosure that would weaken the structural relationship between the powder particles and the nano-whiskers when the nano-whiskers are grown directly and seamlessly from the powder particles. Additionally, growing the nano-whiskers directly from the powder particles assists in preventing crack formation and in providing a greater ability to control the grain structure in the nano-whiskers.
(22) According to another aspect of the disclosure, and using titanium as an example, processing parameters such as the purge gas flow rate, initial pressure, organic gas flow rate (as well as the type of organic gas), temperature, and the purge gas composition affect the preferential formation of TiC (where Ti is .sup.+2), TiO.sub.2 (where Ti is .sup.+4), or TiOC (where Ti is .sup.+4). For example, the preferential formation of a particular product species is highly affected by the partial pressure of oxygen in the reaction chamber. If the oxygen levels are “zero” a preponderance of TiC will preferentially form. If the oxygen levels are low (but not zero) oxides or oxycarbides may be formed by consumption of the oxygen while at the same time some growth of TiC may occur. Then on the opposite end of the continuum, an abundance of oxygen favors a preponderance of TiO.sub.2 growth. As further example, if an inert environment is employed (such as argon without any H.sub.2) the atmosphere is not reducing, and then if C.sub.xH.sub.yO.sub.z is used as the organic gas the formation of H.sub.2O is possible, which acts as an oxidizer. Even when a protective reducing environment is used, oxidation may still occur to produce some Ti.sup.+2 and Ti.sup.+4 states. For example, Ti may be reduced when the oxidized species gains electrons to go to Ti(0); then oxidation occurs, losing electrons so that the titanium goes to an oxidation state of .sup.+2 or .sup.+4. Furthermore, these chemical reactions typically do not just go in one direction all of the time. So in a particular process it is possible to produce both TiC and some TiO.sub.2 or even TiC and TiO.sub.2, and TiOC. However, conditions may be controlled as indicated herein to preferentially produce a specific chemical species.
(23) Applications of Ti/TiX (or Zr/ZrX or Hf/HfX) structures include uses as reinforcing material in metal matrix and ceramic matrix composite materials to increase strength and toughness of such composite materials, as well as uses in other previously-described applications of titanium group nano-whiskers. For example, TiC nano-whiskers anchored to titanium powder particles may be used in hot pressing processes or casting processes to form metal matrix composites such as Ti—TiC and Fe—TiC. Ti/TiC (or Zr/ZrC or Hf/HfC) structures may also be used in hot pressing or molding or slip-casting processes to form ceramic matrix composites. In ceramic matrix composites, the main effect of the incorporation of the Ti/TiC (or Zr/ZrC or Hf/HfC) structures is a toughening of an otherwise brittle ceramic matrix. This toughening is enhanced (compared with many other ceramic toughening processes) because of the substantially uniform size, the substantially uniform morphology, the wide-ranging material compatibility, and the favorable interfacial bonding properties of these structures.
(24) Ti/TiC (or Zr/ZrC or Hf/HfC) structures may also be combined with in-situ formed carbon nano-tubes, such as the carbon nano-tubes anchored to metal powders that are described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/704,564—“COMPOSITE MATERIALS FORMED WITH ANCHORED NANOSTRUCTURES,” filed Feb. 12, 2010, which issued as U.S. Pat. No. 8,974,719 on Mar. 10, 2015. U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/704,564 is incorporated by reference in its entirety herein. For example, CNTs anchored to Fe powder particles may be blended with TiC nano-whiskers anchored to Ti powder particles and the combination may then be formed into metal matrix composites or ceramic matrix composites, by using methods for forming a nano-structure composite material described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/704,564.
Example
(25) Titanium carbide whiskers were grown from titanium powder particles using the parameters indicated in Table 2. Ranges of values indicate variations in different test runs.
(26) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Parameter Baseline Alternate 1 Alternate 2 Alternate 3 Gas Purge 96% Ar- 98% Ar- (93%-99%)AR- 100% Ar 4% H2 2% H2 (7-1%)H2 Purge Gas 100-300 100-5000 100-5000 100-5000 Flow rate (cc/min) Initial Heatup 650 500 500 500 T (deg. C.) Initial P 15 15 15 15 (torr) Operating T 650 500-1000 500-1000 500-1000 (deg. C.) Reactive 300 100-1000 100-1000 100-1000 Organic Flow Rate (cc/min) Operating P 200 1-300 1-300 1-300 (torr) Operating time 1-24 1-24 1-24 1-24 (hr)
(27) Titanium readily adsorbs hydrogen and may chemically react with hydrogen over a wide range of temperatures and pressures. However, Ti reacts much more readily with carbon than with hydrogen, which is important for the formation and growth of TiC nano-whiskers in the presence of hydrogen. Nonetheless, the process conditions of “Alternate 3” of Table 2 are advantageous since a controlled environment without hydrogen is provided.
(28) The titanium carbide whiskers grown directly from titanium powder particles produced by process conditions indicated in Table 2 were hot-pressed into composite structures and tested for hardness compared with standard hot-pressed Ti particle samples. Typical results are depicted in
(29) [Note: The Vickers hardness is the quotient obtained by dividing the kgf load by the square mm area of indentation (kgf/mm.sup.2). Vickers hardness values are generally independent of the test force; that is, they will come out the same for 500 gf and 50 kgf, as long as the force is at least 200 gf. Therefore, the values are reported with units of kgf/mm.sup.2 or without units.]
(30) In summary, embodiments disclosed herein provide comparatively low-cost titanium-based nano-whiskers having substantially uniform morphology. These materials have numerous applications because of improved properties such as increased strength, increased hardness, very high melting points, and superior chemical stability at high temperature.
(31) The foregoing descriptions of embodiments have been presented for purposes of illustration and exposition. They are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the embodiments to the precise forms disclosed. Obvious modifications or variations are possible in light of the above teachings. The embodiments are chosen and described in an effort to provide the best illustrations of principles and practical applications, and to thereby enable one of ordinary skill in the art to utilize the various embodiments as described and with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. All such modifications and variations are within the scope of the appended claims when interpreted in accordance with the breadth to which they are fairly, legally, and equitably entitled.