Abstract

We show that flash-sintering in MgO-doped alumina is accompanied by a sharp increase in electrical conductivity. Experiments that measure conductivity in fully dense specimens, prepared by conventional sintering, prove that this is not a cause-and-effect relationship, but instead that the concomitant increase in the sintering rate and the conductivity share a common mechanism. The underlying mechanism, however, is mystifying since electrical conductivity is controlled by the transport of the fastest moving charged species, while sintering, which requires molecular transport or chemical diffusion, is limited by the slow moving charged species. Joule heating of the specimen during flash sintering cannot account for the anomalously high sintering rates. The sintering behavior of MgO-doped alumina is compared to that of nominally pure-alumina: the differences provide insight into the underlying mechanism for flash-sintering. We show that the pre-exponential in the Arrhenius equation for conductivity is enhanced in the non-linear regime, while the activation energy remains unchanged. The nucleation of Frenkel pairs is proposed as a mechanism to explain the coupling between flash-sintering and the non-linear increase in the conductivity.

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