4.7 Article

Micromechanical properties of Yttria-doped zirconia ceramics manufactured by direct ink writing

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE EUROPEAN CERAMIC SOCIETY
Volume 43, Issue 7, Pages 2884-2893

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jeurceramsoc.2022.10.067

Keywords

Zirconia; Direct ink writing; Hardness; Nanoindentation; Scratch test

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study investigates the micromechanical properties of yttria-doped zirconia ceramics produced by Direct-Ink Writing (DIW) and Cold Isostatic Pressing (CIP). The results show that DIW samples have 20-25% lower hardness values compared to the corresponding CIP samples due to microstructural defects like porosity. However, at the local level, the hardness and elastic modulus achieved by nanoindentation are closer between printed and CIP samples.
Yttria-doped zirconia ceramics have many applications in a wide range of industries mainly due to their excellent mechanical properties, corrosion resistance and biocompatibility. In this study, micromechanical properties of yttria-doped zirconia produced by Direct-Ink Writing (DIW) were investigated and compared to the ones produced by Cold Isostatic Pressing (CIP). In doing so, mechanical response was assessed at different length scales, from macro- up to submicrometric-, by means of Vickers hardness, nanoindentation, and nanoscratch tests. Microstructure was also characterized by determining grain size, crystal structure and phase tetragonal to monoclinic phase transformation. Results revealed that printed samples displayed 20-25% lower hardness values compared to those exhibited by the respective CIP pairs. Differences in hardness between 3 and 8 mol% yttria content evaluated for CIP samples were slight for printed samples, due to the effect of microstructural defects like porosity, resulting from the processing parameters used. At the local level, such an effect was found to be lower. In this sense, hardness and elastic modulus achieved by nanoindentation were closer, when comparing printed and CIP samples. Scratch tests carried out from 0 to 250 mN revealed that 3 mol% Y2O3 samples developed micro-fracture events in the track length, being the printed samples the ones heavily deformed.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available