Abstract

Grain growth kinetics of dense 3 mol. % yttria-stabilized zirconia (3YSZ) ceramics during both DC flash sintering and conventional annealing were investigated using the grain size as a marker of microstructure evolution. The results indicated faster grain growth under greater current density. In contrast to conventionally annealed specimen, the grain boundary mobility was enhanced by almost two orders of magnitude with the applied electric current, revealing that joule heating alone was not sufficient to account for the experimental results. Instead, activation energy for grain growth decreased significantly due to electro-sintering. Systematic characterization of graded microstructure further indicated that local oxygen vacancies and specimen temperature were responsible for a grain size transition. Based on electrochemical reaction involved in flash sintering, grain size reduction at the cathode was proposed to be attributed to the local rearrangement of lattice cations and generated oxygen ions.

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