Abstract

The effect of high-temperature treatment in different media on the phase composition, microhardness and fracture toughness of (ZrO2)1-х(Sm2O3)х crystals with x = 0.02÷0.06 has been studied. The crystals have been grown using direction melt crystallization in a cold skull. The crystals have been heat treated at 1600 °C for 2 h in air and in vacuum. The phase composition of the crystals has been studied using X-ray diffraction and Raman scattering. We show that samarium cations enter the ZrO2 lattice mainly in a trivalent charge state and do not change their charge after air or vacuum annealing. The as-annealed phase composition has changed in all the test crystals except for the (ZrO2)0.94(Sm2O3)0.06 composition. After air or vacuum annealing the (ZrO2)1-x(Sm2O3)x crystals with 0.002 ≤ x ≤ 0.05 contain a monoclinic phase. The (ZrO2)0.94(Sm2O3)0.06 crystals contain two tetragonal phases (t and t´) with different tetragonality degrees. After air or vacuum annealing of the (ZrO2)0.94(Sm2O3)0.06 crystals the lattice parameters of the t and t´ phases change in opposite manners, suggesting that the tetragonality degree of the t phase increases whereas the tetragonality degree of the t´ phase decreases. The microhardness and fracture toughness of the as-annealed crystals depend on the Sm2O3 concentration in the solid solutions. The formation of the monoclinic phase in the (ZrO2)1-х(Sm2O3)х crystals with 0.037 ≤ x ≤ 0.05 significantly reduces the microhardness and fracture toughness of the crystals. Annealing of the (ZrO2)0.94(Sm2O3)0.06 crystals triggers more efficient hardening mechanisms and thus increases the fracture toughness of the crystals. We show that air or vacuum annealing of the (ZrO2)0.94(Sm2O3)0.06 crystals increases the fracture toughness of the crystals by 1.5 times as compared with that of the as-grown crystals.

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