Abstract

Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) imaging is an emerging technology which provides a unique material-diagnostic technique by in situ internal mapping. It can provide information not only on material distribution, but also on the chemical and physical characteristics of materials. However, due to the nuclear dipole dipole interaction in solid state materials, NMR spectroscopic signals are normally very broad. NMR imaging based on these unresolved broad lines is extremely difficult, and resolution is poor. The binder distribution was studied in ceramic green bodies with a stray-field NMR imaging facility at a proton frequency of 163 MHz near the edge of a 9.394 T superconducting magnet. The 1H nuclear spin echo signal from silicon nitride green bodies containing 10 wt% of either polyethylene glycol or polyvinyl alcohol as a binder was detected at 163 MHz. NMR images show a good homogeneity of the binder distribution in the cross-sections of the samples. Overall results show that the distribution of polyethylene glycol in Si3N4 green bodies is more homogeneous than that of polyvinyl alcohol under similar processing parameters. NMR spectroscopic results also indicate a higher moisture content in the green bodies containing a polyvinyl alcohol binder.

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