Abstract

R2O–CaO–MgO–CuO–Al2O3–SiO2 (RNa, K) glass-ceramics were fabricated using the melt-quenching method and the effect of heating rate on the microstructure and properties of the glass-ceramics was investigated. The results demonstrated that the main crystal phase of the samples was clinoenstatite, and the secondary crystal phases were forsterite and diopside. With an increase in heating rate, the diffraction peak intensity of clinoenstatite gradually increased, and the morphology of the particles changed from short columns to long needles. When the heating rate was 1 °C/min, the sample exhibited flexural strength and Vickers hardness of 7.38 GPa and 84.33 MPa, respectively. When the heating rate was 10 °C/min, the Cu+ content in the sample reached the maximum of 2.1 wt%, which is 1.4 times of Cu+ in the brown sample obtained by heat-treatment at 1 °C/min. The colour of the sample intensified as the heating rate was increased from 1 °C/min to 20 °C/min, and the sample heated at 10 °C/min was brownish-red. The heating rate has a significant effect on the colour of glass-ceramics with the same CuO content, providing a new approach for regulating the colour of glass-ceramics. Further, this study has significant prospects in enriching the colour of glass-ceramics for architectural decoration and reducing production costs.

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