Issue 44, 2015

Continuous sol–gel derived SiOC/HfO2 fibers with high strength

Abstract

This study presents the fabrication and characterization of continuous SiOC/HfO2 fibers with high strength by the sol–gel process. Continuous polyhafnosiloxane (PHfSO) gel fibers are spun from the solutions of silicon alkoxides and hafnium dichloride using polyvinyl pyrrolidone as a spinning reagent, and then transform into dense SiOC/HfO2 fibers with homogeneous shrinkage by subsequent drying and pyrolysis treatment. Fourier transform infrared and X-ray photoelectron spectra together with X-ray diffraction analysis indicate that the amorphous SiOC/HfO2 fibers consist of mixed silicon oxycarbide (SiOxC4−x, x = 1–4) and tetravalent hafnium–oxygen units embraced with a certain free-carbon phase. Scanning electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy observations reveal that the SiOC/HfO2 fibers with homogenous Hf distribution exhibit a circular-shaped or an elliptical-shaped cross-section depending on their thickness when employed as gel fibers. Mechanical testing shows that the SiOC/HfO2 fibers exhibit good mechanical property with the maximum tensile strength of 1.5 GPa arising from the incorporation of Hf in the SiOC network.

Graphical abstract: Continuous sol–gel derived SiOC/HfO2 fibers with high strength

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
14 Nov 2014
Accepted
27 Feb 2015
First published
02 Mar 2015

RSC Adv., 2015,5, 35026-35032

Author version available

Continuous sol–gel derived SiOC/HfO2 fibers with high strength

Y. Xu, D. Su, H. Feng, X. Yan, N. Liu and Y. Sun, RSC Adv., 2015, 5, 35026 DOI: 10.1039/C4RA14540B

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