LIU Qiang, WANG Qian,2, CHEN Penghui, LI Xiaoying, ZHANG Lixuan, XIE Tengfei, LI Jiang
Fabrication and Characterizations of Red Ce-doped 8YSZ Transparent Ceramics by Two-step Sintering
LIU Qiang1, WANG Qian1,2, CHEN Penghui2,3, LI Xiaoying2,3, ZHANG Lixuan2,3, XIE Tengfei2,3, LI Jiang2,3
(1. School of Material Science and Engineering, Jiangsu University, Zhenjiang 212013, China; 2. Key Laboratory of Transparent Opto-Functional Inorganic Materials, Shanghai Institute of Ceramics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai 201899, China; 3. Center of Materials Science and Optoelectronics Engineering, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China)
Color zirconia ceramics are widely used in electronics and decoration fields due to their bright colors, high refractive index, wear resistance, corrosion resistance, and non-toxicity to the human body. Cubic cerium doped 8% yttria mol percent stabilized zirconia (Ce-doped 8YSZ) nano-powder with average particle size of 15.9 nm was synthesized by co-precipitation method. Using the powder calcined at 800 ℃ for 4 h as starting material, red zirconia transparent ceramics with high optical transparency and high redness value were prepared by two-step sintering method. Influences of pre-sintering temperature on microstructure, in-line transmittance and color performance of the red Ce-doped 8YSZ ceramics were studied. As the pre-sintering temperature increases from 1200 ℃ to 1300 ℃, average grain size of the ceramics increases from 0.3 μm to 2.2 μm and the relative density increases from 87.2% to 97.1%. The Ce-doped 8YSZ ceramics pre-sintered at 1275 ℃ for 2 h and hot isostatic pressed (HIP) at 1700 ℃ for 3 h show the best in-line transmittance of 47.6% at 700 nm and the highest redness of 52.0.
Ce-doped 8YSZ; red transparent ceramics; air pre-sintering; hot isostatic pressing; optical property
In recent decades, the applications of zirconia material extend to dental restoration materials, smart terminal materials, color decoration materials and other potential fields[1-4], which is attributed to its outstanding mechanical properties, chemical inertness, optical properties and biocompatibility[5-7]. In the past, the cubic yttria stabilized zirconia single crystal is an interesting material for an application as diamond imitation because of its high refractive index of 2.2 and high hardness[8-12]. However, there are some drawbacks for the single crystals, such as high fabrication temperature (2750oC), shape limitation and high cost[13]. In addition, the melting point of the colorants are much lower than that of the zirconia single crystal, causing serious volatilization of the coloring ions and making it difficult to achieve the desired colors. Investigations have demonstrated that zirconia transparent ceramics have many advantages compared with the zirconia single crystals[14-16]. For example, the preparation temperature of zirconia ceramics is low, which can avoid the volatilization of colorants.
In 1986, the first report on transparent c-ZrO2ceramics was published by Tsukuma[14]. Since then, polycrystalline c-ZrO2transparent ceramics have been widely investigated[15-18]. On one hand, c-ZrO2transparent ceramics were fabricated using commercially available yttria stabilized zirconia powders as starting materials. Peuchert,[16]fabricated polycrystalline c-ZrO2transparent ceramics after sintering at 1650 ℃ for 3 h followed by HIP treatment at 1750 ℃ for 1 h using high purity cubic yttria stabilized zirconia powder (Tosoh Corporation, Tokyo, Japan), and the in-line transmittance of 5.6 mm thick samples reached 68% at 600 nm. On the other hand, co-precipitation method is an effective route to synthesize yttria stabilized zirconia nano-powders with good dispersity and high sinterability[17-18], and it is also widely used to prepare various transparent ceramics[19-21]because of its simple and economical process. Chen,[22]prepared yttria-stabilized zirconia transparent ceramics after sintering at 1350 ℃ for 2 h and HIP treatment at 1800 ℃ for 3 h from the co-precipitated nano-powder, and the in-line transmittance of the ceramics with the thickness of 1.0 mm was 67.8% at 800 nm. Currently, there are also some investigations on zirconia ceramics with various colors[2,23].
By doping transition metals or rare earths, various colors can be observed in zirconia ceramics. Compared with other rare earth ions that exist mostly in a trivalent state, cerium exists in the form of Ce3+and Ce4+in the zirconia. Ce3+can exhibits a strong absorption band at about 400 nm caused by 4f-5d transition, while Ce4+does not show any absorption band in the visible range[24]. In order to obtain a red zirconia ceramic with high redness value, Lv[25]fabricated Ce-doped red zirconia ceramics by a high-temperature reduction method, and the absorption band was in the range from 480 to 500 nm and the maximum redness value of the ceramics was 32. Additionally, iron oxide was widely used as a red colorant for the preparation of red ceramics[26-29]. Results showed that Fe2O3had poor color rendering and the samples were orange-red. At present, the redness value of zirconia ceramics was low and few studies were conducted on transparent zirconia ceramics with red color which can broaden the application of zirconia ceramics in filters, signal lampshades and other fields.
In order to obtain red zirconia ceramics with high transparency and large redness value, two-step sintering method was used. In this work, the Ce-doped 8YSZ nano-powder used as the starting material was synthesizedby a reverse co-precipitation method. Red Ce-doped 8YSZ transparent ceramics were prepared by air pre-sintering combined with HIP post-treatment. The influences of pre-sintering temperatures on microstructure, in-line transmittance and color parameters of Ce-doped 8YSZ ceramics were studied.
ZrOCl2?8H2O (99.5%, Zhongkai New Materials Co., Ltd., Jining, China) was dissolved in deionized water to obtain the solution containing Zr4+. Ce(NO3)3and Y(NO3)3solutions were prepared by dissolving CeO2(99.995%, Golden Dragon Rare-earth Co., Ltd., Fujian, China) and Y2O3(99.999%, Golden Dragon Rare-earth Co., Ltd., Fujian, China) into the high-purity hot nitric acid. The solutions were mixed in stoichiometrical proportions of Ce3+:Zr4+:Y3+=0.01:0.91:0.16. Ammonium hydroxide (25.0%–28.0%, Sinopharm Chemical Reagent Co., Ltd., Shanghai, China) solution was used as precipitant solution and PEG4000 (Aladdin Industrial Co., Ltd., Shanghai, China) was added as dispersant. The mixed salt solution was dropped into the precipitant solution at a rate of 20 mL/min under stirring and the terminal pH was 9.0. After aging for 1 h at room temperature, the resultant slurry was washed for 4 times with deionized water and twice with anhydrous ethanol. After drying at 70 ℃ for 30 h, the precursor was seived through a 75 μm (200-mesh) screen. Then the precursor was calcined at 800 ℃ for 4 h to obtain the Ce-doped 8YSZ powder. After that, the powder was uniaxially dry-pressed into pellets at 40 MPa, and then cold isostatically pressed at 250 MPa to get the ceramic green bodies. The green pellets were pre-sintered at 1200–1300 ℃ for 2 h in air and HIP treated at 1700 ℃ for 3 h under 176 MPa in Ar atmosphere. The ceramic samples were then polished to 1 mm thickness for subsequent testing. The pre-sintered and HIP post-treated ceramics were thermally etched at 1100 and 1450 ℃ for 3 h, respectively.
Thermogravimetry and differential thermal analysis (TG-DTA, Thermo Plus Evo II, Rigaku, Japan) were used to test the thermal behavior of precursor in air at a heating rate of 10 ℃/min. X-ray diffraction (XRD, Model D/MAX2200 PC, Rigaku, Japan) was used to analyze the phase of the nano-powder and the ceramics in the range of 2=20°–80°, which was excited by a Cu Kαradiation. Norcross ASAP 2010 micromeritics was used to determine the specific surface area of the nano- powder with the nitrogen adsorption isothermal at 77 K. Field emission scanning electron microscope (FESEM, SU9000, Hitachi, Japan) was used to analyze the morphologies of precursor and calcined powder. The microstructures and energy-dispersive X-ray spectrometry (EDS) mapping of sintered ceramics were observed by field emission scanning electron microscope (FESEM, SU8220, Hitachi, Japan). UV-VIS-NIR spectrophotometer (Model Cary-5000, Varian, USA) was used to measure the in-line transmittance, absorption spectrum and the CIE value with the Color software. The*×*×*colorimetry method recommended by the International Commission on Illumination (CIE 15-2004) was used. And the normal/normal geometry (0°:0°) for transmission measurements was used. For the color measurement system,*is the lightness axis 0 (black) – 100 (white),*is the red (+) – green (–) axis, and*is the yellow (+) – blue (–) axis.
The TG-DTA curves of the Ce-doped 8YSZ precursor are shown in Fig. 1. The total weight loss of the precursor is 30.0% in the heating process from room temperature to 1200 ℃. The weight loss of 24.4% below 280 ℃ is mainly caused by the removal of absorbed water, hydrate water and residual ethanol and the decomposition of hydroxides, accompanied with a large endothermic peak at 115 ℃[19]. The exothermic peak at 290 ℃ is due to the decomposition of PEG4000. The exothermic peak at 461 ℃ is related to the crystallization of Ce-doped 8YSZ phase[30].
Fig. 2 shows the XRD patterns of the as-synthesized Ce-doped 8YSZ precursor and the powder calcined at 800 ℃ for 4 h. The result shows that the precursor is amorphous. After calcined at 800 ℃, the specimen shows good crystallinity and the peaks are consistent with the c-ZrO2phase (JCPDS 49-1642). The average crystallite size (XRD) of the Ce-doped 8YSZ powder is 11.5 nm calculated by Scherrer’s formula using the full width at half maximum (FWHM) of XRD pattern.
Fig. 3 shows the FESEM micrographs of the Ce-doped 8YSZ precursor and the powder calcined at 800 ℃ for 4 h. It can be seen from Fig. 3(a) that the precursor is heavily aggregated. The reason for the agglomeration is the hydrogen bond between the hydroxides and the dispersant (PEG4000) covered on the surface of the precursor[17]. The powder exhibits good homogeneity and dispersity after calcination and the shape of the powder is quasi-spherical. The specific surface area (BET) of the Ce-doped 8YSZ powder is 63.3 m2/g and the average particle size (BET) is 15.9 nm.
Fig. 1 TG-DTA curves of the Ce-doped 8YSZ precursor
Fig. 2 XRD patterns of (a) Ce-doped 8YSZ precursor and (b) the powder calcined at 800 ℃ for 4 h
Fig. 3 FESEM micrographs of (a) Ce-doped 8YSZ precursor and (b) the powder calcined at 800 ℃ for 4 h
Fig. 4 FESEM micrographs of the thermally etched surfaces of Ce-doped 8YSZ ceramics pre-sintered at different temperatures in air for 2 h
(a) 1200 ℃; (b) 1230 ℃; (c) 1250 ℃; (d) 1275 ℃; (e) 1300 ℃
Fig. 5 Relative densities and average grain size of the Ce-doped 8YSZ ceramics pre-sintered at 1200–1300 ℃ in air for 2 h
Fig. 6(a-e) show the FESEM micrographs of the thermally etched surfaces of Ce-doped 8YSZ ceramics pre-sintered at 1200–1300 ℃ in air for 2 h combined with HIP post-treatment at 1700 ℃ for 3 h. It can be seen that the grain size and porosity of the ceramics after HIP post-treatment have changed significantly compared with the pre-sintered ceramics. The average grain size of the ceramics pre-sintered at 1200 ℃ increases to 4.7 μm after HIP treatment. The relative density of the ceramics only increases to 91.3%, and it can be noticed from Fig. 6(a) that there are still a lot of pores in the ceramics after HIP post-treatment. The reason for this phenomenon is that there are many open pores in the pre-sintered ceramics, which result in the infiltration of argon and elimination of the driving force of pore migration[32]. For the ceramics pre-sintered at 1230 and 1250 ℃ combined with HIP post treated at 1700 ℃, most of the pores are eliminated and the average grain sizes are 83 and 104 μm, respectively. Meanwhile some intragranular pores are formed because the migration rate of grain boundaries is faster than the remove rate of pores during the HIP post-treatment[31]. After HIP treatment, the ceramics pre-sintered at 1275 ℃ have a nearly pore-free microstructure due to the effective removal of intergranular pores and the average gain size is 110 μm. For the HIP-treated ceramics pre-sintered at 1300 ℃, the intragranular pores are still in the ceramics after HIP post-treatment. Fig. 6(f-i) show the EDS elemental mapping of theCe-doped 8YSZ ceramics. The doped element of Ce is homogeneously distributed in the grains of the ceramics.
Fig. 7 shows the XRD patterns of the pre-sintered and the HIP post-treated ceramics. The splitting peaks at high angles are caused by CuKα2. The result shows that the crystal structures of the ceramics before and after HIP treatment are both cubic fluorite type, which does not exhibit the birefringence effect at the grain boundaries.
Fig. 6 (a-e) FESEM micrographs of the thermally etched surfaces of Ce-doped 8YSZ ceramics pre-sintered at 1200– 1300 ℃for 2 h and HIP post-treatment at 1700 ℃ for 3 h; (f-i) EDS element mapping of the Ce-doped 8YSZ ceramics pre-sintered at 1275 ℃
(a) 1200 ℃; (b) 1230 ℃; (c) 1250 ℃; (d) 1275 ℃; (e) 1300 ℃
Fig. 7 XRD patterns of the (a) pre-sintering and (b) HIP-treatment ceramics
Fig. 8 (a) Photograph and (b) in-line transmittance of the Ce-doped 8YSZ ceramics (1 mm thick) pre-sintered at 1200–1300 ℃ in air for 2 h and HIP post-treatment at 1700 ℃ for 3 h under 176 MPa in Ar atmosphere
Fig. 9 Absorption spectra of the ceramics pre-sintered at different temperatures and HIP post-treatment at 1700 ℃
Table 1 CIE value of Ce-doped 8YSZ ceramics pre- sintered at 1230–1300 ℃ for 2 h and HIP post-treatment at 1700 ℃ for 3 h
In this work, Ce-doped 8YSZ transparent ceramics were prepared by air pre-sintering at 1200–1300 ℃ for 2 h combined with HIP post-treatment at 1700 ℃ for 3 h using the nano-powder synthesizeda co-precipitation method. By doping with cerium ions, the 8YSZ ceramics show a bright red color. The pre-sintering temperatures have a great influence on microstructure and optical performance. The ceramics pre-sintered at 1275 ℃ for 2 h combined with HIP post-treatment at 1700 ℃ for 3 h show the highest in-line transmittance of 47.6% at 700 nm and the biggest redness value of 52.0. The preparation temperature of zirconia ceramics is lower than the single crystals, which can effectively avoid the volatilization of colorants. Red Ce-doped 8YSZ transparent ceramics have wide application prospects in filter materials, signal lamp materials and other fields.
[1] ZHANG X X, ZHU D B, LIANG J S. Progress on hydrothermal stability of dental zirconia ceramics., 2020, 35(7): 759–768.
[2] LV H D, BAO J X, RUAN F,. Preparation and properties of black Ti-doped zirconia ceramics., 2020, 9(3): 6201–6208.
[3] SANI E, SCITI D, CAPIANI C,. Colored zirconia with high absorbance and solar selectivity., 2020, 186: 147–151.
[4] LAGANOVSKA K, OLSTEINS D, SMITS K,. Formation of translucent nanostructured zirconia ceramics., 2021, 41(13): 6641–6648.
[5] LEI L W, FU Z Y, WANG H,. Transparent yttria stabilized zirconia from glycine-nitrate process by spark plasma sintering., 2012, 38(1): 23–28.
[6] IKESUE A. Processing of ceramics: breakthroughs in optical materials. Hoboken: John Wiley and Sons, 2021: 275–348.
[7] BEJUGAMA S, CHAMEETTACHAL S, PATI F,.cellular response and hydrothermal aging of two-step sintered Nb2O5doped ceria stabilized zirconia ceramics., 2021, 47(2): 1594–1601.
[8] WOOD D L, NASSAU K. Refractive index of cubic zirconia stabilized with yttria., 1982, 21(16): 2978–2981.
[9] TIAN T, XU J Y, ZHAN Z G,. Study on the spectral characteristics of emerald-like cubic zirconia crystal., 2015, 44(3): 581–586.
[10] DASHA A, KIMB B N, KLIMKEC J,. Transparent tetragonal-cubic zirconia composite ceramics densified by spark plasma sintering and hot isostatic pressing., 2019, 39(4): 1428–1435.
[11] ZHANG H B, KIM B N, MORITA K,. Optimization of high-pressure sintering of transparent zirconia with nano-sized grains., 2010, 508(1): 196–199.
[12] ZHANG H B, KIM B N, MORITA K,. Optical properties and microstructure of nanocrystalline cubic zirconia prepared by high-pressure spark plasma sintering., 2011, 94(9): 2981–2986.
[13] TIAN F, CHEN C, LIU Y,. Fabrication of Nd:YAG transparent ceramics from co-precipitated powders by vacuum pre- sintering and HIP post-treatment., 2020, 101: 109728.
[14] TSUKUMA K. Transparent titania-yttria-zirconia ceramics., 1986, 5: 1143–1144.
[15] TSUKUMA K, YAMASHITA I, KUSUNOSE T. Transparent 8mol% Y2O3-ZrO2(8Y) ceramics., 2010, 91(3):813–818.
[16] PEUCHERT U, OKANO Y, MENKE Y,. Transparent cubic-ZrO2ceramics for application as optical lenses., 2009, 29(2): 283–291.
[17] LIU Q, CHEN P H, JIANG N,. Fabrication and characterizations of 8.7mol% Y2O3-ZrO2transparent ceramics using co-precipitated nanopowders., 2019, 171: 98–101.
[18] LUO J M, CAO Z C, DENG L P,. Preparation and luminescence property of Ho3+/Yb3+:8YSZ nanopowders., 2017, 46(10): 1902–1906.
[19] HUANG X Y, LIU Y M, LIU Y,. Fabrication and characterizations of Yb:YAG transparent ceramics using alcohol- water co-precipitation method., 2021, 36(2): 217–224.
[20] LI X Y, SNETKOV I L, YAKOVLEV A,. Fabrication and performance evaluation of novel transparent ceramics RE:Tb3Ga5O12(RE=Pr, Tm, Dy) toward magneto-optical application., 2021, 10(2): 271–278.
[21] LIU Z Y, TOCI G, PIRRI A,. Fabrication, microstructures, and optical properties of Yb:Lu2O3laser ceramics from co-precipitated nano-powders., 2020, 9(6): 674–682.
[22] CHEN P H, LIU Q, LI X Y,. Influence of terminal pH value on co-precipitated nanopowders for yttria-stabilized ZrO2transparent ceramics., 2019, 98: 109475.
[23] LV H D, BAO J X, QI S Y,. Optical and mechanical properties of purple zirconia ceramics., 2019, 7(3): 306–311.
[24] R?MER H, LUTHER K D, ASSMUS W. Coloured zirconia., 1994, 29(6): 787–794.
[25] LV H D, BAO J X, CHAO L M,. Development mechanism of Ce-doped red zirconia ceramics prepared by a high-temperature reduction method., 2019, 797: 931–939.
[26] LEE D Y, KIM D J, SONG Y S. Chromaticity, hydrothermal stability, and mechanical properties of t-ZrO2/Al2O3composites doped with yttrium, niobium, and ferric oxides., 2000, 289(1/2): 1–7.
[27] HOLZA L, MACIASB J, VITORINOB N,. Effect of Fe2O3doping on colour and mechanical properties of Y-TZP ceramics., 2018, 44(15): 17962–17971.
[28] JOVANí M, FORTU?O-MORTE M, BELTRáN-MIR H,. Environmental-friendly red-orange ceramic pigment based on Pr and Fe co-doped Y2Zr2O7., 2018, 38(4): 2210–2217.
[29] WILLEMS E, ZHANG F, VAN MEERBEEK B,. Iron oxide colouring of highly-translucent 3Y-TZP ceramics for dental restorations., 2019, 39(2/3): 499–507.
[30] SALEHI S, FATHI M H. Fabrication and characterization of Sol-Gel derived hydroxyapatite/zirconia composite nanopowders with various yttria contents., 2010, 36(5): 1659–1667.
[31] SU S, LIU Q, HU Z W,. A simple way to prepare Co:MgAl2O4transparent ceramics for saturable absorber., 2019, 797: 1288–1294.
[32] CHEN P H, LIU Q, FENG Y G,. Transparent Y0.16Zr0.84O1.92ceramics sintered from co-precipitated nanopowder., 2020, 100: 109645–1–6.
[33] NIKL M, LAGUTA V V, VEDDA A. Complex oxide scintillators: material defects and scintillation performance., 2008, 245(9): 1701–1722.
2000年7月, 我大學(xué)畢業(yè)到中國科學(xué)院上海硅酸鹽研究所潘裕柏老師課題組工作。當(dāng)時我的辦公室正好在郭先生辦公室隔壁, 讓我有很多機會與先生近距離接觸。郭先生給人的印象是平易近人、知識淵博、科研功底深厚。受郭先生的感染, 我入所沒多久就立志要攻讀研究生。經(jīng)過努力, 我順利通過國家研究生入學(xué)考試, 并幸運地成為郭先生和潘老師的研究生。2002年9月, 我進(jìn)入中國科學(xué)技術(shù)大學(xué)聯(lián)合培養(yǎng), 也是在這一年郭先生發(fā)現(xiàn)自己的聲音變得嘶啞。2003年6月底, 我回到所里開展“稀土離子摻雜YAG激光透明陶瓷的制備、結(jié)構(gòu)及性能研究”的課題研究。同年8月, 郭先生查出來患了喉癌, 他用自己的嗓音在我主持的“青年學(xué)術(shù)沙龍”上做了最后一次學(xué)術(shù)報告“碳纖維補強石英復(fù)合材料及其應(yīng)用”。2003年9月, 郭先生進(jìn)行了全喉切除手術(shù), 從此他再也無法正常發(fā)音了。癌癥手術(shù)后的生活中, 郭先生把更多的精力放在研究生的培養(yǎng)與指導(dǎo)上, 他借助人工發(fā)聲裝置經(jīng)常跟我討論研究課題, 并提出解決問題的建議, 幫助我成功研制出高性能的YAG激光陶瓷。研究生期間我撰寫的每一篇學(xué)術(shù)論文, 郭先生都一字一句仔細(xì)修改, 使我的科研論文撰寫能力得到不斷提升。在與癌癥抗?fàn)幤陂g, 郭先生表現(xiàn)出來的積極樂觀深深地鼓舞了我, 讓我在科研生活中遇到任何困難都不會輕言放棄。這些年來, 郭先生主張逆向思維, 提倡標(biāo)新立異, 追求事物本質(zhì)的科學(xué)精神也一直激勵著我。我希望自己能像郭先生一樣, 在自己的研究領(lǐng)域揮灑汗水與智慧, 在科研的道路上發(fā)光發(fā)熱。
左二: 李江; 左四: 郭景坤先生
(李江)
兩步燒結(jié)法制備紅色Ce:8YSZ透明陶瓷及其性能研究
劉強1, 王倩1,2, 陳鵬輝2,3, 李曉英2,3, 章立軒2,3, 謝騰飛2,3, 李江2,3
(1. 江蘇大學(xué) 材料科學(xué)與工程學(xué)院, 鎮(zhèn)江 212013; 2. 中國科學(xué)院 上海硅酸鹽研究所, 透明光功能無機材料重點實驗室, 上海 201899; 3. 中國科學(xué)院大學(xué) 材料科學(xué)與光電工程中心, 北京 100049)
彩色氧化鋯陶瓷具有鮮艷色彩、高折射率、耐磨損、耐腐蝕及對人體無毒等優(yōu)點, 被廣泛應(yīng)用于電子、裝飾等領(lǐng)域。本研究采用共沉淀法合成了平均粒徑為15.9 nm的立方相Ce:8YSZ納米粉體。以經(jīng)過800 ℃煅燒4 h的粉體為原料, 通過兩步燒結(jié)技術(shù)制備了具有高光學(xué)透過率和高紅色度的Ce:8YSZ透明陶瓷,并系統(tǒng)研究了空氣預(yù)燒溫度對紅色Ce:8YSZ透明陶瓷微觀結(jié)構(gòu)、直線透過率和色度的影響。當(dāng)預(yù)燒溫度從1200 ℃升高到1300 ℃時, Ce:8YSZ陶瓷的平均晶粒尺寸從0.3 μm增大到2.2 μm, 同時相對密度從87.2%增加到97.1%。經(jīng)過1275 ℃空氣預(yù)燒2 h并結(jié)合1700 ℃熱等靜壓燒結(jié)3 h所得的Ce:8YSZ透明陶瓷表現(xiàn)出最佳的光學(xué)質(zhì)量和最大的紅色度值, 在700 nm處的直線透過率為47.6%, 紅色度為52.0。
Ce:8YSZ; 紅色透明陶瓷; 空氣預(yù)燒; 熱等靜壓燒結(jié); 光學(xué)性能
TQ174
A
1000-324X(2022)08-0911-07
10.15541/jim20220025
date:2022-01-17;
date: 2022-03-17;
2022-04-07
National Key R&D Program of China (2021YFE0104800); Key Research Project of the Frontier Science of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (QYZDB-SSW-JSC022)
LIU Qiang (1964–), male, professor. E-mail: lq88611338@163.com
劉強(1964–), 男, 教授. E-mail: lq88611338@163.com
LI Jiang, professor. E-mail: lijiang@mail.sic.ac.cn
李江, 研究員. E-mail: lijiang@mail.sic.ac.cn