20 research outputs found

    Residual strain mapping through pair distribution function analysis of the porcelain veneer within a yttria partially stabilised zirconia dental prosthesis

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    OBJECTIVE: Residually strained porcelain is influential in the early onset of failure in Yttria Partially Stabilised Zirconia (YPSZ) - porcelain dental prosthesis. In order to improve current understanding it is necessary to increase the spatial resolution of residual strain analysis in these veneers. METHODS: Few techniques exist which can resolve residual stress in amorphous materials at the microscale resolution required. For this reason, recent developments in Pair Distribution Function (PDF) analysis of X-ray diffraction data of dental porcelain have been exploited. This approach has facilitated high-resolution (70μm) quantification of residual strain in a YPSZ-porcelain dental prosthesis. In order to cross-validate this technique, the sequential ring-core focused ion beam and digital image correlation approach was implemented at a step size of 50μm. This semi-destructive technique exploits microscale strain relief to provide quantitative estimates of the near-surface residual strain. RESULTS: The two techniques were found to show highly comparable results. The residual strain within the veneer was found to be primarily tensile, with the highest magnitude stresses located at the YPSZ-porcelain interface where failure is known to originate. Oscillatory tensile and compressive stresses were also found in a direction parallel to the interface, likely to be induced by the multiple layering used during fabrication. SIGNIFICANCE: This study provides the insights required to improve prosthesis modelling, to develop new processing routes that minimise residual stress and ultimately to reduce prosthesis failure rates. The PDF approach also offers a powerful new technique for microscale strain quantification in amorphous materials.</p

    Rich Polymorphism of a Metal-Organic Framework in Pressure-Temperature Space.

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    We present an in situ powder X-ray diffraction study on the phase stability and polymorphism of the metal-organic framework ZIF-4, Zn(imidazolate)2, at simultaneous high pressure and high temperature, up to 8 GPa and 600 °C. The resulting pressure-temperature phase diagram reveals four, previously unknown, high-pressure-high-temperature ZIF phases. The crystal structures of two new phases-ZIF-4-cp-II and ZIF-hPT-II-were solved by powder diffraction methods. The total energy of ZIF-4-cp-II was evaluated using density functional theory calculations and was found to lie in between that of ZIF-4 and the most thermodynamically stable polymorph, ZIF- zni. ZIF-hPT-II was found to possess a doubly interpenetrated diamondoid topology and is isostructural with previously reported Cd(Imidazolate)2 and Hg(Imidazolate)2 phases. This phase exhibited extreme resistance to both temperature and pressure. The other two new phases could be assigned with a unit cell and space group, although their structures remain unknown. The pressure-temperature phase diagram of ZIF-4 is strikingly complicated when compared with that of the previously investigated, closely related ZIF-62 and demonstrates the ability to traverse complex energy landscapes of metal-organic systems using the combined application of pressure and temperature

    In situ poling X-ray diffraction studies of lead-free BiFeO3–SrTiO3 ceramics

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    The origin of the large electrostrain in BiFeO3-BaTiO3 (BF-BT) ceramics is controversial and has been attributed to either a field-induced transition to a long-range ferroelectric (FE) state or to multi-symmetry, polar nanoregions within a pseudocubic matrix whose vectors approximately align with the direction of the applied field. The (1-x)BiFeO3-xSrTiO3 (BF-xST) solid solution is structurally and microstructurally similar to BF-BT and provides a further case study to assess the origin of electrostrain. In BF-xST, electrostrain is optimized at x = 0.4 (0.15%) which zero field, room temperature full-pattern X-ray diffraction (XRD) Rietveld refinement and scanning/transmission electron microscopy suggest is composed of 15% rhombohedral (R) cores, surrounded by 85% pseudocubic (PC) shells. In-situ poling synchrotron XRD reveals that all peaks remain singlet and exhibit no change in full width half maximum up to 100 kV cm−1, confirming the absence of long-range FE order and the retention of short-range polar order, despite the large applied field. Strain anisotropy (calculated from individual peaks) of ε220 > ε111 > ε200 and the associated strain orientation distribution however, indicate the existence of local orthorhombic (O), R and tetragonal (T) symmetries. The data therefore imply the existence under poling of multi-symmetry polar nanoregions in BF-0.4ST rather than a long FE phase, supporting the model described by Wang and co-workers (2019) for BF-BT compositions

    Observation of dose-rate dependence in a Fricke dosimeter irradiated at low dose rates with monoenergetic X-rays

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    <p>Absolute measurements of the radiolytic yield of Fe3+ in a ferrous sulphate dosimeter formulation (6 mM Fe2+), with a 20 keV x-ray monoenergetic beam, are reported. Dose-rate suppression of the radiolytic yield was observed at dose rates lower than and different in nature to those previously reported with x-rays. We present evidence that this effect is most likely to be due to recombination of free radicals radiolytically produced from water. The method used to make these measurements is also new and it provides radiolytic yields which are directly traceable to the SI standards system. The data presented provides new and exacting tests of radiation chemistry codes.</p

    A state-of-the-art review of micron-scale spatially resolved residual stress analysis by FIB-DIC ring-core milling and other techniques

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    Quantification of residual stress gradients can provide great improvements in understanding the complex interactions between microstructure, mechanical state, mode(s) of failure and structural integrity. Highly focused local probe non-destructive techniques such as X-ray diffraction, electron diffraction or Raman spectroscopy have an established track record in determining spatial variations in the relative changes in residual stress with respect to a reference state for many structural materials. However, the interpretation of these measurements in terms of absolute stress values requires a strain-free sample often difficult to obtain due to the influence of chemistry, microstructure or processing route. With the increasing availability of focused ion beam instruments, a new approach has been developed which is known as the micro-scale ring-core focused ion beam-digital image correlation technique. This technique is becoming the principal tool for quantifying absolute in-plane residual stresses. It can be applied to a broad range of materials: crystalline and amorphous metallic alloys and ceramics, polymers, composites and biomaterials. The precise nano-scale positioning and well-defined gauge volume of this experimental technique make it eminently suitable for spatially resolved analysis, that is, residual stress profiling and mapping. Following a summary of micro-stress evaluation approaches, we focus our attention on focused ion beam-digital image correlation methods and assess the application of micro-scale ring-core methods for spatially resolved residual stress profiling. The sequential ring-core milling focused ion beam-digital image correlation method allows micro- to macro-scale mapping at the step of 10–1000 μm, while the parallel focused ion beam-digital image correlation approach exploits simultaneous milling operation to quantify stress profiles at the micron scale (1–10 μm). Cross-validation against X-ray diffraction results confirms that these approaches represent accurate, reliable and effective residual stress mapping methods. </jats:p

    Mechanism of enhanced energy storage density in AgNbO3-based lead-free antiferroelectrics

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    The mechanisms underpinning high energy storage density in lead-free Ag1–3xNdxTayNb1-yO3 antiferroelectric (AFE) ceramics have been investigated. Rietveld refinements of in-situ synchrotron X-ray data reveal that the structure remains quadrupled and orthorhombic under electric field (E) but adopts a non-centrosymmetric space group, Pmc21, in which the cations exhibit a ferrielectric configuration. Nd and Ta doping both stabilize the AFE structure, thereby increasing the AFE-ferrielectric switching field from 150 to 350 kV cm−1. Domain size and correlation length of AFE/ferrielectric coupling reduce with Nd doping, leading to slimmer hysteresis loops. The maximum polarization (Pmax) is optimized through A-site aliovalent doping which also decreases electrical conductivity, permitting the application of a larger E. These effects combine to enhance energy storage density to give Wrec = 6.5 J cm−3 for Ag0.97Nd0.01Ta0.20Nb0.80O3

    Acceptor doping and actuation mechanisms in Sr-doped BiFeO3eBaTiO3 ceramics

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    BiFeO3-BaTiO3 (BF-BT) ceramics are important multiferroic materials, which are attracting significant attention for potential applications in high temperature lead-free piezoelectric transducers. In the present study, the effects of Sr2+ as an acceptor dopant for Bi3+, in the range from 0 to 1.0 at%, on the structure and ferroelectric/piezoelectric properties of 0.7BiFeO3-0.3BaTiO3 ceramics were evaluated. The use of a post-sintering Ar annealing process was found to be an effective approach to reduce electrical conductivity induced by the presence of free electron holes associated with reoxidation during cooling. A low Sr dopant concentration (0.3 at %) yielded enhanced ferroelectric (Pmax ~ 0.37 C m-2, Pr ~ 0.30 C m-2) and piezoelectric (d33 ~ 178 pC N-1, kp ~ 0.27) properties, whereas higher levels led to chemically heterogeneous core-shell structures and secondary phases with an associated decline in performance. The electric field-induced strain of the Sr-doped BF-BT ceramics was investigated using a combination of digital image correlation macroscopic strain measurements and in-situ synchrotron X-ray diffraction. Quantification of the intrinsic (lattice strain) and extrinsic (domain switching) contributions to the electric field induced strain indicated that the intrinsic contribution dominated during the poling process
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