Abstract
In this paper, cellular mullite bodies were developed by thermal direct-consolidation of foamed aqueous mullite-bovine serum albumin (BSA) and mullite-BSA-methylcellulose suspensions, burning out (650 °C, 2 h) and sintering (1600 °C, 2 h). Some modifications to the shaping route conventionally used in protein casting were incorporated in the proposed processing to obtain bodies with controlled and homogeneous microstructures. The materials were characterized by porosity measurements, analysis of phases by XRD, and microstructural analysis by SEM and Hg-porosimetry. Characteristic parameters of cell size distributions, percentage of open and closed cells, window size and interstitial pore size distributions, and microstructural features of the mullite matrix were determined. Moreover, basic 2D cell size parameters and global 3D stereological parameters were analysed. The obtained results showed that mullite bodies with hierarchical porosity and different microstructural features were developed from the design and control of processing routes, which use BSA as a foaming and binder/consolidator agent.
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