Abstract

The aim of this work is to study the mechanisms of polymorphic transformations in ZrO2 ceramics doped with MgO with different concentrations during thermal isochronous annealing, as well as the effect of the phase composition of ceramics on the change in strength properties and resistance to mechanical stress. Solving the problem of polymorphic transformations in zirconium dioxide by doping them with MgO will increase the resistance of ceramics to external influences, as well as increase the mechanical strength of ceramics. According to the data of X-ray phase analysis, it was found that the addition of the MgO dopant to the composition of ceramics at the chosen thermal annealing temperature leads to the initialization of polymorphic transformation processes, while changing the dopant concentration leads to significant differences in the types of polymorphic transformations. In the case of an undoped ZrO2 ceramic sample, thermal annealing at a temperature of 1500 °C leads to structural ordering due to the partial removal of deformation distortions of the crystal lattice caused by mechanochemical grinding. During the study of the effect of MgO doping and polymorphic transformations in ZrO2 ceramics on the strength properties, it was found that the main hardening effect is due to a change in the dislocation density during the formation of a ZrO2/MgO type structure. At the same time, polymorphic transformations of the m—ZrO2 → t—ZrO2 type have a greater effect on hardening at low dopant concentrations than t—ZrO2 → c—ZrO2 type transformations.

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