Abstract

Manufacturing honeycomb‐structured catalysts require a careful understanding of the microstructure of the solid substrate and its dependence on thermal‐processing conditions. Herein, it is the thermal responses of microcracks in an uncoated microcracked aluminum titanate honeycomb catalyst is investigated by analyzing the material's resonance frequency using the high‐temperature impulse excitation technique. The resonance frequencies are presented as Young's modulus values to avoid sample size effects. Dynamic Young's modulus measurements show closed‐loop hysteresis due to microcracks healing and reopening, causing a reversible response. The hysteresis is further used to understand microcracks’ dependence on critical thermal‐processing conditions used in a catalyst manufacturing plant, including peak operating temperature (800–1000 °C), dwell period (1–3 h), and heating rates (1–5 °C min−1). Microcracks are observed to have two healing responses: instantaneous and delayed healing. Both responses significantly influence the design of catalyst manufacturing. Complete reopening of microcracks from their healing temperature (1150 °C) is a very time‐consuming process (50–60 h). However, it is shown in the analysis that microcrack relaxation is a critical phenomenon that must be considered in quality‐controlled environments.

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