JOURNAL ARTICLE

Hot Isostatic Pressing of Transparent Nd:YAG Ceramics

Abstract

This paper demonstrates that fine‐grained (2–3 μm), transparent Nd:YAG can be achieved at SiO 2 doping levels as low as 0.02 wt% by the sinter plus hot isostatic pressing (HIP) approach. Fine grain size is assured by sintering to 98% density, in order to limit grain growth, followed by HIP. Unlike dry‐pressed samples, tape‐cast samples were free of large, agglomerate‐related pores after sintering, and thus high transparency (i.e., >80% transmission at 1064 nm) could be achieved by HIP at <1750°C along with lower silica levels, thereby avoiding conditions shown to cause exaggerated grain growth. Grain growth was substantially limited at lower SiO 2 levels because silica is soluble in the YAG lattice up to ∼0.02–0.1 wt% at 1750°C, thus allowing sintering and grain growth to occur by solid‐state diffusional processes. In contrast, liquid phase enhanced densification and grain growth occur at ∼0.08–0.14 wt% SiO 2 , especially at higher temperatures, because the SiO 2 solubility limit is exceeded.

Keywords:
Materials science Sintering Hot isostatic pressing Grain growth Ceramic Transparent ceramics Agglomerate Grain size Metallurgy Mineralogy Composite material Chemistry

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166
Cited By
3.11
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
30
Refs
0.93
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Citation History

Topics

Luminescence Properties of Advanced Materials
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Materials Chemistry
Advanced ceramic materials synthesis
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Ceramics and Composites
Glass properties and applications
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Ceramics and Composites
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