Abstract
The process control agent (PCA) stearic acid has been used to prevent excessive cold welding during mechanical milling of an Al–TiO 2 powder mixture. Gradual decomposition of the stearic acid during high-energy ball milling caused contamination of the powder with carbon. The decomposition rate was found to be 3–4 times faster when 2.5 wt.% instead of 5 wt.% of PCA have been used. This resulted in a higher degree of powder contamination—in the early stages of milling—for a lower initial PCA addition. The degree of contamination with carbon can readily be estimated by thermogravimetry and by the size of an endothermic peak at 875 °C, due to a reaction between aluminium carbide and titanium aluminide, in the trace of differential scanning calorimetry experiments.
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