Glass breakthrough
11 August 2004

Scientists in the US have developed a novel technique to make bulk
quantities of glass from alumina for the first time. Anatoly Rosenflanz and
colleagues at 3M in Minnesota used a "flame-spray" technique to alloy
alumina (aluminium oxide) with rare-earth metal oxides to produce strong
glass with good optical properties. The method avoids many of the problems
encountered in conventional glass forming and could, say the team, be
extended to other oxides (A Rosenflanz et al. 2004 Nature 430 761).

Glass is formed when a molten material is cooled so quickly that its
constituent atoms do not have time to align themselves into an ordered
lattice. However, it is difficult to make glasses from most materials
because they need to be cooled -- or quenched -- at rates of up to 10
million degrees per second.

Silica is widely used in glass-making because the quenching rates are much
lower, but researchers would like to make glass from alumina as well because
of its superior mechanical and optical properties. Alumina can form glass if
it is alloyed with calcium or rare-earth oxides, but the required quenching
rate can be as high as 1000 degrees per second, which makes it difficult to
produce bulk quantities.

Rosenflanz and colleagues started by mixing around 80 mole % of powdered
alumina with various rare-earth oxide powders -- including lanthanum,
gadolinium and yttrium oxides. Next, they fed the powders into a
high-temperature hydrogen-oxygen flame to produce molten particles that were
then quenched in water. The resulting glass beads, which were less than 140
microns across, were then heat-treated -- or sintered -- at around 1000°C.
This produced bulk glass samples in which nanocrystalline alumina-rich
phases were dispersed throughout a glassy matrix. The new method avoids the
need to apply pressures of 1 gigapascal or more, as is required in existing
techniques

The 3M scientists characterised the glasses using optical microscopy,
scanning electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction and thermal analysis, and
tested the strength of the materials with hardness and fracture toughness
tests. They found that their samples were much harder than conventional
silica-based glasses and were almost as hard as pure polycrystalline
alumina.

Moreover, over 95% of the glasses were transparent (see figure) and had
attractive optical properties. For example, fully crystallized alumina-rare
earth oxide ceramics showed high refractive indices if the grains were kept
below a certain size.

Author
Belle Dumé is Science Writer at PhysicsWeb



http://physicsweb.org/article/news/8/8/9


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