Investigation on the effect of infiltration parameters to the mechanical performance of biomorphic silicon carbide / Noor Leha Abdul Rahman

Biomorphic Silicon Carbide (bioSiC) is a new class of porous ceramic materials derived directly from natural resources. Due to the increasing demand of global silicon carbide (nearly 16.1% from 2020 to 2027), this study is an attempt to overcome the depletion of petroleum resource faced by the comme...

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Main Author: Abdul Rahman, Noor Leha
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/53835/1/53835.pdf
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spelling my-uitm-ir.538352022-04-12T00:58:53Z Investigation on the effect of infiltration parameters to the mechanical performance of biomorphic silicon carbide / Noor Leha Abdul Rahman 2020-10 Abdul Rahman, Noor Leha TP Chemical technology Synthetic products Chemical engineering Biomorphic Silicon Carbide (bioSiC) is a new class of porous ceramic materials derived directly from natural resources. Due to the increasing demand of global silicon carbide (nearly 16.1% from 2020 to 2027), this study is an attempt to overcome the depletion of petroleum resource faced by the commercial silicon carbide. The proposed bioSiC is an alternative to the expensive commercial silicon carbide by using the wood waste from furniture industry. Among the natural resources available, natural wood has been identified as an attractive option of carbon precursor due to the availability and its anisotropic nature which gives the unique feature as a hierarchical preform. This ceramic material is fabricated by pyrolysis of wood waste in an inert atmosphere leaving an amorphous carbon preform. The amorphous carbon is infiltrated with molten Si at elevated temperature forming a porous bioSiC with a microstructure that is analogous to the wood precursor. The objective of this study is to investigate the processing, microstructure, and properties of bioSiC produced using wood-derived preform. This was accomplished by analysis of bioSiC from three different wood precursors, obtained from Malaysian rainforest which covered a range of pore volumes, pore sizes, and pore size distributions. In this work, Kapur, Dark Red Meranti and Kempas were pyrolyzed at the temperature of 850 C for 2 hours to produce the carbon preforms. BioSiC was prepared at two different temperatures, which were 1500 C and 1600 C. The silicon melt infiltration process was conducted at 1 to 5 hours holding time in order to investigate the effect of holding time on the properties of bioSiC. The decomposition behaviour of raw wood into carbon during pyrolysis was assessed using a thermo-gravimetric (TGA) system by heating the sample from 50 °C to 1000 °C. Scanning electron microscope (SEM) analysis of pyrolyzed samples and bioSiC showed that the structural feature preserved the original wood structure. Pore volume and porosity of the samples, as determined by mercury intrusion porosimetry, showed multimodal pore distribution of pyrolyzed samples from small to large pores. The density of bioSiC ranging from 0.6850 g/cm3 to 0.9983 g/cm3 was determined by the Archimedes method. The bioSiC phase of resulting product was analysed by X-ray diffraction (XRD), indicating that SiC has been produced without excess silicon after etching. The increasing holding time of infiltration enhanced the formation of bioSiC up to 3 hours. However, longer reaction to 5 hours reduced the bioSiC formation at infiltration temperature of 1500 C. Scanning electron microscope (SEM) analysis showed that the silicon infiltrated both larger and smaller vessels by retaining the original wood structure without being affected by the closure of the small pore and reduction of pore diameter. The mechanical performance indicated that the formation of bioSiC obtained by Dark Red Meranti was optimum at 3 hours holding time and temperature of 1500 C Therefore, among the three types of wood precursor selected, Dark Red Meranti showed more promising for the production of porous biomorphic silicon carbide compared to Kapur and Kempas. The synthesis of biomorphic porous SiC from sustainable and low-cost materials demonstrates the novelty of this study. The possibility of SiC production from Malaysian hardwood is promising with the prospect of potential application such as catalyst support, molten metal filter or high-performance advanced ceramics. 2020-10 Thesis https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/53835/ https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/53835/1/53835.pdf text en public phd doctoral Universiti Teknologi MARA Faculty of Mechanical Engineering Mei Hyie, Koay (Assoc. Prof.Ir.Dr.)
institution Universiti Teknologi MARA
collection UiTM Institutional Repository
language English
advisor Mei Hyie, Koay (Assoc. Prof.Ir.Dr.)
topic TP Chemical technology
Synthetic products
Chemical engineering
spellingShingle TP Chemical technology
Synthetic products
Chemical engineering
Abdul Rahman, Noor Leha
Investigation on the effect of infiltration parameters to the mechanical performance of biomorphic silicon carbide / Noor Leha Abdul Rahman
description Biomorphic Silicon Carbide (bioSiC) is a new class of porous ceramic materials derived directly from natural resources. Due to the increasing demand of global silicon carbide (nearly 16.1% from 2020 to 2027), this study is an attempt to overcome the depletion of petroleum resource faced by the commercial silicon carbide. The proposed bioSiC is an alternative to the expensive commercial silicon carbide by using the wood waste from furniture industry. Among the natural resources available, natural wood has been identified as an attractive option of carbon precursor due to the availability and its anisotropic nature which gives the unique feature as a hierarchical preform. This ceramic material is fabricated by pyrolysis of wood waste in an inert atmosphere leaving an amorphous carbon preform. The amorphous carbon is infiltrated with molten Si at elevated temperature forming a porous bioSiC with a microstructure that is analogous to the wood precursor. The objective of this study is to investigate the processing, microstructure, and properties of bioSiC produced using wood-derived preform. This was accomplished by analysis of bioSiC from three different wood precursors, obtained from Malaysian rainforest which covered a range of pore volumes, pore sizes, and pore size distributions. In this work, Kapur, Dark Red Meranti and Kempas were pyrolyzed at the temperature of 850 C for 2 hours to produce the carbon preforms. BioSiC was prepared at two different temperatures, which were 1500 C and 1600 C. The silicon melt infiltration process was conducted at 1 to 5 hours holding time in order to investigate the effect of holding time on the properties of bioSiC. The decomposition behaviour of raw wood into carbon during pyrolysis was assessed using a thermo-gravimetric (TGA) system by heating the sample from 50 °C to 1000 °C. Scanning electron microscope (SEM) analysis of pyrolyzed samples and bioSiC showed that the structural feature preserved the original wood structure. Pore volume and porosity of the samples, as determined by mercury intrusion porosimetry, showed multimodal pore distribution of pyrolyzed samples from small to large pores. The density of bioSiC ranging from 0.6850 g/cm3 to 0.9983 g/cm3 was determined by the Archimedes method. The bioSiC phase of resulting product was analysed by X-ray diffraction (XRD), indicating that SiC has been produced without excess silicon after etching. The increasing holding time of infiltration enhanced the formation of bioSiC up to 3 hours. However, longer reaction to 5 hours reduced the bioSiC formation at infiltration temperature of 1500 C. Scanning electron microscope (SEM) analysis showed that the silicon infiltrated both larger and smaller vessels by retaining the original wood structure without being affected by the closure of the small pore and reduction of pore diameter. The mechanical performance indicated that the formation of bioSiC obtained by Dark Red Meranti was optimum at 3 hours holding time and temperature of 1500 C Therefore, among the three types of wood precursor selected, Dark Red Meranti showed more promising for the production of porous biomorphic silicon carbide compared to Kapur and Kempas. The synthesis of biomorphic porous SiC from sustainable and low-cost materials demonstrates the novelty of this study. The possibility of SiC production from Malaysian hardwood is promising with the prospect of potential application such as catalyst support, molten metal filter or high-performance advanced ceramics.
format Thesis
qualification_name Doctor of Philosophy (PhD.)
qualification_level Doctorate
author Abdul Rahman, Noor Leha
author_facet Abdul Rahman, Noor Leha
author_sort Abdul Rahman, Noor Leha
title Investigation on the effect of infiltration parameters to the mechanical performance of biomorphic silicon carbide / Noor Leha Abdul Rahman
title_short Investigation on the effect of infiltration parameters to the mechanical performance of biomorphic silicon carbide / Noor Leha Abdul Rahman
title_full Investigation on the effect of infiltration parameters to the mechanical performance of biomorphic silicon carbide / Noor Leha Abdul Rahman
title_fullStr Investigation on the effect of infiltration parameters to the mechanical performance of biomorphic silicon carbide / Noor Leha Abdul Rahman
title_full_unstemmed Investigation on the effect of infiltration parameters to the mechanical performance of biomorphic silicon carbide / Noor Leha Abdul Rahman
title_sort investigation on the effect of infiltration parameters to the mechanical performance of biomorphic silicon carbide / noor leha abdul rahman
granting_institution Universiti Teknologi MARA
granting_department Faculty of Mechanical Engineering
publishDate 2020
url https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/53835/1/53835.pdf
_version_ 1783734880238043136