Abstract

AbstractPowder injection molding is a near‐net shape, high‐speed fabrication process that has been studied only lightly with silicon carbide (SiC) as the powder. The addition of nanoparticles to the monomodal powder to form a bimodal powder increases the solid fraction in the feedstock but may also adversely affect other properties. In this paper, the kinetic properties of thermally dewaxed SiC mono‐ and bimodal feedstocks by three models were compared to solvent‐dewaxed SiC and thermally dewaxed powder metal from other studies. The activation energy Ea of pyrolytic dewaxing was graphically estimated by the master dewaxing curve model as ~80 kJ/mol for monomodal and ~60 kJ/mol for bimodal SiC powder size distributions, a little higher than the ~50 kJ/mol by solvent dewaxing of the same compositions. The Ea in the Flynn‐Wall model was 64 kJ/mol for monomodal and 53 kJ/mol for bimodal. The Ea was 49 kJ/mol for monomodal and 42 kJ/mol for bimodal SiC powder by the Kissinger thermal analysis model. The lower Ea of the bimodal feedstock was attributed to its increased nucleation sites. These results provide the basis for dewaxing models—part of the rate‐limiting step in powder injection molding—for SiC powder‐binder systems.

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