Vacuum-Induced Surface Freezing to Produce Monoliths of Aligned Porous Alumina

Vacuum-induced surface freezing has been used to produce uni-directional freezing of colloidal aluminum oxide dispersions. It leads to zones of different structure within the resulting sintered monoliths that are highly similar to those known for freeze casting using a cryogen cold source. A more-or...

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Main Authors: Sandra Großberger, Tobias Fey, Geoffrey Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2016-12-01
Series:Materials
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/9/12/983
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spelling doaj-8bb8a771994e4cf5889f9cf50e23d2a02020-11-25T01:01:04ZengMDPI AGMaterials1996-19442016-12-0191298310.3390/ma9120983ma9120983Vacuum-Induced Surface Freezing to Produce Monoliths of Aligned Porous AluminaSandra Großberger0Tobias Fey1Geoffrey Lee2Division of Pharmaceutics, University of Erlangen, Cauerstrasse 4, 91054 Erlangen, GermanyDepartment of Material Science & Engineering, University of Erlangen, Martenstrasse 5, 91058 Erlangen, GermanyDivision of Pharmaceutics, University of Erlangen, Cauerstrasse 4, 91054 Erlangen, GermanyVacuum-induced surface freezing has been used to produce uni-directional freezing of colloidal aluminum oxide dispersions. It leads to zones of different structure within the resulting sintered monoliths that are highly similar to those known for freeze casting using a cryogen cold source. A more-or-less dense surface layer and a cellular sub-surface region are formed, beneath which is a middle region of aligned lamellae and pores that stretches through most of the depth of the monolith. This is the case even at a volume fraction of dispersed phase as low as 0.032. A more-dense but still porous base layer is formed by accumulation of rejected nanoparticles preceding the freezing front and differs from previous reports in that no ice lenses are observed. X-ray micro-computed tomography reveals a uniform aligned pore structure vertically through the monolith. The pores close to the periphery are oriented radially or as chords, while the center region contains domains of parallel pores/lamellae. The domains are randomly oriented to one another, as already reported for regular freeze casting. This technique for directional freezing is convenient and easy to perform, but requires further refinement in that the temperature gradient and freezing rates remain yet to be measured. Also, control of the temperature gradient by varying chamber vacuum and shelf temperature needs to be evaluated.http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/9/12/983directional freezingsurface freezingvacuumaligned poresaluminasinter
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sandra Großberger
Tobias Fey
Geoffrey Lee
spellingShingle Sandra Großberger
Tobias Fey
Geoffrey Lee
Vacuum-Induced Surface Freezing to Produce Monoliths of Aligned Porous Alumina
Materials
directional freezing
surface freezing
vacuum
aligned pores
alumina
sinter
author_facet Sandra Großberger
Tobias Fey
Geoffrey Lee
author_sort Sandra Großberger
title Vacuum-Induced Surface Freezing to Produce Monoliths of Aligned Porous Alumina
title_short Vacuum-Induced Surface Freezing to Produce Monoliths of Aligned Porous Alumina
title_full Vacuum-Induced Surface Freezing to Produce Monoliths of Aligned Porous Alumina
title_fullStr Vacuum-Induced Surface Freezing to Produce Monoliths of Aligned Porous Alumina
title_full_unstemmed Vacuum-Induced Surface Freezing to Produce Monoliths of Aligned Porous Alumina
title_sort vacuum-induced surface freezing to produce monoliths of aligned porous alumina
publisher MDPI AG
series Materials
issn 1996-1944
publishDate 2016-12-01
description Vacuum-induced surface freezing has been used to produce uni-directional freezing of colloidal aluminum oxide dispersions. It leads to zones of different structure within the resulting sintered monoliths that are highly similar to those known for freeze casting using a cryogen cold source. A more-or-less dense surface layer and a cellular sub-surface region are formed, beneath which is a middle region of aligned lamellae and pores that stretches through most of the depth of the monolith. This is the case even at a volume fraction of dispersed phase as low as 0.032. A more-dense but still porous base layer is formed by accumulation of rejected nanoparticles preceding the freezing front and differs from previous reports in that no ice lenses are observed. X-ray micro-computed tomography reveals a uniform aligned pore structure vertically through the monolith. The pores close to the periphery are oriented radially or as chords, while the center region contains domains of parallel pores/lamellae. The domains are randomly oriented to one another, as already reported for regular freeze casting. This technique for directional freezing is convenient and easy to perform, but requires further refinement in that the temperature gradient and freezing rates remain yet to be measured. Also, control of the temperature gradient by varying chamber vacuum and shelf temperature needs to be evaluated.
topic directional freezing
surface freezing
vacuum
aligned pores
alumina
sinter
url http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/9/12/983
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