Wetting and Interfacial Reaction Investigations of Iron-Based Alloys/Alumina Systems by Means of the Sessile Drop Shape Analysis Method
Research output: Thesis › Doctoral Thesis
Standard
2009.
Research output: Thesis › Doctoral Thesis
Harvard
APA
Vancouver
Author
Bibtex - Download
}
RIS (suitable for import to EndNote) - Download
TY - BOOK
T1 - Wetting and Interfacial Reaction Investigations of Iron-Based Alloys/Alumina Systems by Means of the Sessile Drop Shape Analysis Method
AU - Karasangabo, Augustin
N1 - no embargo
PY - 2009
Y1 - 2009
N2 - The wetting phenomenon plays a paramount role in many high technology applications ranging from microelectronics to steelmaking that involve the spreading of liquids on solid surfaces. The behaviour of a liquid partially wetting a smooth and inert solid surface is rather well understood. However, the case of rough solid surfaces is much less clear, even though roughness is a real-world problem and its value in technical applications is very high. Some theoretical studies suggest that the surface roughness of a non-planar substrate may enhance wetting, but a comprehensive study conducted using "real" substrates and Fe-based alloys at steelmaking temperatures is still lacking. In the present PhD work, the drop shape analysis approach has been used to determine the change of the wetting angle in the temperature range 1550 - 1620°C in purified Ar atmosphere for various Fe-based alloys on dense polycrystalline as-sintered and as-ground alumina substrates. A non-wetting behaviour was observed for Fe alloys containing very low concentrations of Ti, Al, or P on both substrate qualities regardless of ceramic surface topography or temperature changes. In contrast, for Fe alloys with high Ti, Al, or P contents a remarkable enhancement of wetting was registered with increasing solute concentration, temperature, and isothermal holding time. In the case of a simultaneous presence of Ti and P in the Fe alloy the contact angle continuously decreased with increasing contents of Ti and P for both alumina substrate qualities, whereas the surface roughness of the substrates had a negligible effect on the wettability, which was rather improved by the presence on the substrate surface of local defects. Finally, contact angles produced by Fe alloys with high contents of Ti and Al on as-ground alumina were consistently higher than those produced on the as-sintered substrates, and no significant improvement of the wettability was registered neither with increasing solute content nor holding time. This is attributable to two effects, viz.: the formation of a non-wettable hercynite layer at the interface for the Fe-Ti-P and Fe-Ti-Al alloys, and the presence of extensive cracks in the original substrate at the surface of the as-ground substrates. Both effects have adverse implications on wettability as they bring about an obstruction of the spreading process eventually terminating it, with the net result of a poor wetting.
AB - The wetting phenomenon plays a paramount role in many high technology applications ranging from microelectronics to steelmaking that involve the spreading of liquids on solid surfaces. The behaviour of a liquid partially wetting a smooth and inert solid surface is rather well understood. However, the case of rough solid surfaces is much less clear, even though roughness is a real-world problem and its value in technical applications is very high. Some theoretical studies suggest that the surface roughness of a non-planar substrate may enhance wetting, but a comprehensive study conducted using "real" substrates and Fe-based alloys at steelmaking temperatures is still lacking. In the present PhD work, the drop shape analysis approach has been used to determine the change of the wetting angle in the temperature range 1550 - 1620°C in purified Ar atmosphere for various Fe-based alloys on dense polycrystalline as-sintered and as-ground alumina substrates. A non-wetting behaviour was observed for Fe alloys containing very low concentrations of Ti, Al, or P on both substrate qualities regardless of ceramic surface topography or temperature changes. In contrast, for Fe alloys with high Ti, Al, or P contents a remarkable enhancement of wetting was registered with increasing solute concentration, temperature, and isothermal holding time. In the case of a simultaneous presence of Ti and P in the Fe alloy the contact angle continuously decreased with increasing contents of Ti and P for both alumina substrate qualities, whereas the surface roughness of the substrates had a negligible effect on the wettability, which was rather improved by the presence on the substrate surface of local defects. Finally, contact angles produced by Fe alloys with high contents of Ti and Al on as-ground alumina were consistently higher than those produced on the as-sintered substrates, and no significant improvement of the wettability was registered neither with increasing solute content nor holding time. This is attributable to two effects, viz.: the formation of a non-wettable hercynite layer at the interface for the Fe-Ti-P and Fe-Ti-Al alloys, and the presence of extensive cracks in the original substrate at the surface of the as-ground substrates. Both effects have adverse implications on wettability as they bring about an obstruction of the spreading process eventually terminating it, with the net result of a poor wetting.
KW - Benetzbarkeit
KW - Benetzung
KW - Benetzungswinkel
KW - Clogging
KW - Grenzflächenreaktion
KW - Kontaktwinkel
KW - Korrosion
KW - Oberflächenspannung
KW - Reaktive Benetzung
KW - Sessile Drop
KW - Tropfenkonturanalyse
KW - Wettability
KW - wetting
KW - reactive wetting
KW - contact angle
KW - interfacial properties
KW - drop shape analysis
KW - sessile drop method
KW - corrosion
KW - clogging
M3 - Doctoral Thesis
ER -