Commercial titania powders were calcined in order to investigate the influence of the heating history on the thermally stable phase (rutile). Temperatures from 620 to 700 degrees C and heating rates from 50 to 300 degrees C/h were used in order to evaluate their influence on the kinetics of transformation and microstructure evolution. The quantitative analysis of anatase-rutile mixtures based on X-ray diffraction intensities was performed. The results were plotted as cumulative transformation rate vs. cumulative coarsening rate in order to address the heating history of the anatase to rutile transformation. As the main result it was found that the amount of anatase transformed into rutile increases with increasing heating rate at fixed soaking time and temperature of calcination. Through linear extrapolation of experimental data obtained from the calcined commercial titania Degussa P25, it was found that 83 nm for the rutile crystallite size is the lowest limit needed for getting 100% of rutile powders. A substantial improvement in the anatase to rutile kinetic transformation was achieved after pressing the starting powders in order to exploit the interface nucleation.

Heating rate dependence of anatase to rutile transformation

Galizia Pietro;Galassi Carmen
2016

Abstract

Commercial titania powders were calcined in order to investigate the influence of the heating history on the thermally stable phase (rutile). Temperatures from 620 to 700 degrees C and heating rates from 50 to 300 degrees C/h were used in order to evaluate their influence on the kinetics of transformation and microstructure evolution. The quantitative analysis of anatase-rutile mixtures based on X-ray diffraction intensities was performed. The results were plotted as cumulative transformation rate vs. cumulative coarsening rate in order to address the heating history of the anatase to rutile transformation. As the main result it was found that the amount of anatase transformed into rutile increases with increasing heating rate at fixed soaking time and temperature of calcination. Through linear extrapolation of experimental data obtained from the calcined commercial titania Degussa P25, it was found that 83 nm for the rutile crystallite size is the lowest limit needed for getting 100% of rutile powders. A substantial improvement in the anatase to rutile kinetic transformation was achieved after pressing the starting powders in order to exploit the interface nucleation.
2016
Istituto di Scienza, Tecnologia e Sostenibilità per lo Sviluppo dei Materiali Ceramici - ISSMC (ex ISTEC)
titania
calcination
X-ray diffraction
polymorphic phase transformation kinetic
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/341245
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