Open Access Article
Xiaodan
Yang‡
ab,
Yao
Shan‡
ab,
Ying
Hong‡
ab,
Zhuomin
Zhang
ab,
Shiyuan
Liu
ab,
Xiaodong
Yan
ab,
Xuetian
Gong
c,
Guangzu
Zhang
c and
Zhengbao
Yang
*a
aDepartment of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Clear Water Bay, Hong Kong, China. E-mail: zbyang@ust.hk
bDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China
cSchool of Optical and Electronic Information, Engineering Research Center for Functional Ceramic MOE and Wuhan National Laboratory for Optoelectronics, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan 430074, China
First published on 5th February 2024
Piezoceramics with global porosity and local compaction are highly desired to exploit the combination of mechanical and electrical properties. However, achieving such a functional combination is challenging because of the lack of techniques for applying uniform pressure inside porous ceramic green parts. Nature provides many examples of generating strong forces inside the macro and micro channels via the state transformation of water. Inspired by these phenomena, we present a technique of “ice and fire”, that is, water freezing (ice pressing) and high-temperature sintering (fire), to produce ideal porous piezoceramics. We introduce a new compaction method called the “ice pressing method”, which manipulates liquid phase transition for compaction. This method has several advantages, including uniform pressure distribution, a wide pressure range, high effectiveness, and selective freezing. It can generate an ultrahigh pressure of up to 180 MPa on the piezoceramic green skeletons in minutes while retaining their functional pore structures. By exploiting the Mpemba phenomenon, we further accelerate the compaction procedure by 11%. The first ice-pressed and second fire-consolidated lead zirconate titanate (PZT) ceramics are highly densified and exhibit an outstanding piezoelectric response (d33 = 531 pC N−1), comparable to conventional pressed bulk counterparts and 10–20 times higher than those of unpressed materials. The novel ice pressing method breaks the limitation of lacking a compaction technique for porous ceramics. The versatile and effective ice pressing method is a green and low-cost route promoting applications in sensors, acoustics, water filtration, catalyst substrates, and energy harvesting.
New conceptsPorous ceramics are widely used in energy harvesters, sensors, batteries, electronics, and filters. The existing technologies cannot manufacture 3D globally porous but locally compact ceramics in a highly efficient and low-cost way. It is challenging to generate uniform and controllable pressure inside porous ceramic microstructures. Inspired by the frost weathering and Mpemba effect, this work develops an “ice and fire” technique as a new solution to fabricate globally porous and locally compact structural and functional ceramics. The term “ice and fire” mimics the classic manufacturing process of piezoceramic of “force and fire”: force pressing and high temperature sintering. Accordingly, two new concepts are emphasized. One is the ice pressing method, which breaks the limitation of lacking a compaction technique for porous ceramics. The other is the unique Mpemba effect for manipulating the freezing process. The fabricated PZT exhibits an outstanding piezoelectric response of d33 = 531 pC N−1, 10–20 times higher than that of its counterparts. Moreover, the ice pressing strategy is compatible with other manufacturing processes, like the sacrificed template, gel casting, additive manufacturing, etc. Thus, applications in thermal insulation, catalyst substrates, filtration systems, and biomedical and energy storage and conversion are expected to expand. This study underscores the versatility and efficacy of the ice-pressing method and highlights its potential as a valuable tool for manufacturing complex structures. |
Water and ice are known to have many unusual features. For instance, volume expansion is inevitable during the water freezing process. During frost weathering,7 when water fills the gaps in rocks and freezes in place, the resulting ice growth can exert pressures of up to 207 MPa inside cracks in the rock, assuming a temperature of −22 °C.8–10 The stress caused by water expansion induces damage to rocks, plants, buildings, and infrastructure, revealing the enormous energy involved in water transformation.7 For another instance, freezing does not always occur even when cooling. Anderson discovered in 1968 that frozen clay mineral–water mixtures contain a significant amount of unfrozen water, which creates a movable surface layer that separates the mineral surfaces from the ice.11 The unfrozen water can also be explained by the Gibbs–Thomson effect: containing liquids within porous materials lowers the freezing point. The smaller the pore size is, the lower the freezing temperature becomes.9,12,13 This effect provides a path to realize regional selectivity via regulating the pore size.
Here, we explore the liquid–solid transformation for fabricating compact piezoceramics. Piezoceramics are key enabling materials in actuators, sensors, transducers, and memory devices.14,15 Compact piezoceramics usually exhibit high piezoelectric responses16,17 but a low hydrostatic figure of merit and poor acoustic coupling.18–23 To attain balanced performance or abnormal responses, researchers have designed three-dimensional (3D) microstructures such as holes and tunnels in piezoelectric ceramics and formed metamaterials, smart composites, and transducers.17,18,23,24 Unfortunately, the construction of lightweight porous bodies usually suffers from the significant loss of mechanical properties and piezoelectricity, thus making the integration of compactness and porosity contradictory.25 Is it possible to fabricate globally porous but locally compact materials? Nature shows its intelligence in such delicate materials as bones and shells; we human intelligence still cannot. Existing technologies, such as uniaxial compression, sintering, and cold isostatic pressing (CIP), cannot generate pressure inside micro holes locally without causing damage to the global structures.10,16,26,27
Inspired by the natural phenomena mentioned above, we present a technique of “ice and fire”, that is, manipulation of force via water freezing (ice) and high-temperature sintering (fire) to produce materials with global porosity and local compaction. The term “ice and fire” mimics the classic manufacturing process of piezoceramic products of “force and fire”: force pressing and high-temperature sintering. Here we use the pervasiveness of water flow to penetrate microstructures, and then freeze water to generate uniform pressure on the ceramic green bodies while maintaining the global porous structure, ending it with a sintering process (Fig. 1).
A wide pressure range is one of the remarkable features of the ice-pressing process. The pressure range during water freezing is challenging to measure using a single liquid or solid pressure sensor, since water transforms from liquid to solid during the process. To address this issue, we designed a setup to measure the force during ice pressing indirectly. The main element is a steel vessel with a removable lid. The pressure of ice expansion on the lid can be easily determined using a pressure sensor, which is considered approximately equivalent to the pressure generated by ice expansion (detailed in Fig. S3, ESI†). And the pressure generated by ice expansion on the cover is approximately equivalent to the pressure generated by ice expansion. According to the pressure–time curve, the ice pressing process can be divided into two segments: rapid freezing and slow unloading (Fig. 2b). The first segment (from I–III) corresponds to rapid freezing, in which the ice and water phases co-exist simultaneously. The pressure–time curve drops and then rises due to the competition between ice expansion and water shrinkage. When water is completely frozen, the system stops cooling down and comes to the second segment. Ice starts to thaw and unload slowly. This is consistent with the corresponding density of water/ice at different temperatures (Fig. S3c, ESI†). The phase transformation can provide an ultrahigh pressure of up to 180 MPa (Fig. S3c, ESI†), that is, 1800 times atmospheric pressure. For comparison, the pressure range of dry pressing is typically between 13 and 100 MPa,29–32 while the pressure range for CIP generally is between 100 and 500 MPa.25,33,34 The pressure supplied by the ice pressing method is not as wide as CIP. However, overpressure may result in the formation of a closed pore and reduce densification. For practical application, the pressure produced from the ice pressing method is more than enough to prepare many piezoceramics. It is worth noting that the high-pressure generation only requires rapid water cooling down. Besides adequate pressure from the ice–water transition, homogeneous pressure distribution originating from the fast freezing in liquid nitrogen is also vital to improve the ice-pressing method. As illustrated in Fig. S4 (ESI†), the ice-template structures, resulting from the freeze-drying of the sodium alginate solution, reveal that the freezing process produces locally oriented ice crystals with a high degree of order. Fast freezing in liquid nitrogen enables randomly oriented tiny ice crystals to form, resulting in homogeneous pressure.35–37
Rapid freezing of the ice pressing process is essential to prevent the collapse of the internal framework of the sample during solidification. The Mpemba effect is utilized to achieve fast freezing.36,38 To evaluate this, water with different initial temperatures is introduced into a container, and its temperature changes are observed as it freezes entirely in a liquid nitrogen bath. According to the results of in situ temperature mappings (Movie S1, ESI†) and temperature curves (Fig. 2c & inset), hot water shows an exponentially faster cooling rate to reach the relative equilibrium than that in the cool case, which takes less time (about 15 seconds) to freeze. We can accelerate the compaction procedure by 11% by exploiting the Mpemba phenomenon. Research conducted by J. D. Brownridge's group suggests that convection likely played a role in facilitating the faster freezing of water at higher temperatures.21 That is to say, the cooling rate depends on the temperature gradient between the sample and its surroundings. Therefore, the temperature of hot water cools exponentially at the beginning and then slows down. At the same time, the cooling rate slows down considerably during the last few degrees for the cool water (Fig. 2c). Notably, the freezing temperature is below 0 °C, indicating supercooling, which could be attributed to the ambient cooling temperatures provided by a liquid nitrogen cooling vessel, typically ranging between −10 °C and −20 °C. In addition, in the absence of ice nucleators (i.e., ice crystals, dust particles, or other particles), pure water does not freeze at 0 °C. Sometimes, the temperature may fall below −39 °C before ice crystals form. Given these circumstances, hot water would tend to slightly supercool and spontaneously freeze.39
The evidence presented above suggests that the Mpemba effect observed in this system is attributed to both thermal convection and supercooling. Overall, these findings provide new insights into engineering optimization based on the Mpemba effect. Researchers could potentially develop new strategies for rapidly removing heat from localized sources by engineering this effect into technologically relevant materials.
The compaction of the green body influences piezoelectric performance. Fig. 3b and Fig. S6 (ESI†) highlight the variation of the dielectric constant (ε) and dielectric loss (tan
δ) versus the frequency. The ICEP-PZT shows a higher dielectric constant and a slightly lower dielectric loss within the whole frequency ranges, due to the improvement of the grain boundary after the ice-pressing process. The polarization levels versus applied electrical field (P–E) hysteresis loops are shown in Fig. 3c. The ICEP-PZT performs well-saturated P–E loops with a higher maximum polarization (53.9 μC cm−2), remanent polarization (44.07 μC cm−2), and a lower coercive field (15.83 kV cm−2), indicating that ICEP-PZT is easier to be poled.40 It is commonly accepted that higher porosity results in lower Pr due to a lower quantity of active components compared to the dense counterpart, leading to a reduced level of polarization.21,22 The high diffraction peaks can be identified from the XRD patterns, indicating good crystallinity (Fig. S7, ESI†). The easy reversal of polarization under DC bias can directly result in the improvement of piezoelectric responses.41,42 Therefore, ICEP-PZT also exhibits a higher piezoelectric coefficient d33 of 531 pC N−1 (Fig. 3d and Table S1, ESI†), which is over four times higher than that of UP-PZT (125 pC N−1). ICEP-PZT is comparable to conventional pressed bulk counterparts (i.e., uniaxial pressing31,32,43–45 and CIP30,34). Theoretically, the properties of the piezoceramic depend to a great extent on the densification degrees of the green compact. For low densification degrees, the electric field is concentrated in the pores with lower permittivity. This reduces the effective electric charge in the ceramic bulk, leading to a reduction of remanent polarization Pr and piezoelectric properties, and vice versa. The improved piezoelectric performance observed above is attributed to the ice pressure method, which generates a uniform and high pressure that acts equally over the surface of the green bodies, eliminating defects or voids in the final products. Therefore, the increased density of ICEP-PZT allows for sufficient polarization, thereby further improving the piezoelectric properties of the piezoceramics.41 Overall, we believe the ice pressing method is a promising compaction process for manufacturing bulk ceramics. It can increase the densification degree of green bodies to prepare high-performing piezoelectric ceramics.
It is important to note that the new ice pressing method described herein is not only compatible with other processing techniques, but also enables the manufacturing of piezoceramics in a diverse range of shapes. To illustrate this, we successfully fabricate cylindrical-, square-, and strip-like PZT and barium titanate (BTO), as depicted in Fig. 3e. When preparing piezoceramics with a high aspect ratio, the structure may be prone to collapse during the ice pressing process. However, this challenge can be overcome by increasing the mechanical strength of the precursor. For example, the proportion of binders may be increased, or a pre-sintering step may be implemented. These measures enhance the precursor's mechanical strength, ultimately mitigating the risk of structural collapse during the ice-pressing process.
The ice pressing method, in particular, exhibits selective freezing, with water initially transforming into ice in the macropore structure and subsequently in the slits (Fig. 4a). The pore preference originates from the evolution of the ice–water interface (Fig. S10, ESI†).9,13,36,37 At the micro-scale, the ice–water interface moves into the pore only when the surface temperature drops lower than the critical temperature. The freezing temperature Tpore in pore always performs a depression than that in bulk. The depression can be described using the Gibbs–Thomson equation (see full discussion in the ESI†):47
Piezoresponse force microscopy (PFM) is adopted to characterize the piezoelectric variation of porous PZT, so as to reveal the local structure and piezoelectric properties (Fig. 4e and f). The magnitude of the out-of-plane displacement images is shown on the left, while the right section displays their corresponding phase images. The ICEP-PZT shows an enhanced piezoelectric response corresponding to the out-of-plane polarization. In order to evaluate their average piezoelectric properties, piezoresponse of the region at different driven voltages is measured.48 The average values of displacement are obtained from all measurements, as a function of the amplitude of the applied voltage (Fig. 4g). Thus, the piezoelectric coefficient (d33) of UP-PZT and ICEP-PZT can be calculated to be 71.1 and 93.4 pm V−1, respectively.
The local compaction structure can improve the local piezoelectric properties and contribute to the overall output. We further characterize the overall piezoelectric responses by assembling the piezoelectric composite device. As the inset image in Fig. 4i displays, a vibration generator is used to conduct a special frequency and compressing force onto the piezoceramic devices. As shown in Fig. 4i, the porous ICEP-PZT-based composite exhibits a stronger pressure sensitivity than the porous UP-PZT-based composite at the wide pressure range from 0.01 MPa to 0.8 MPa. The comparison of UP-PZT and ICEP-PZT further demonstrates that the local compaction increases the connectivity of the framework and dramatically benefits improved piezoelectric responses. This is due to the simultaneous internal and external stress generated during freezing, which maintains the porous structure while locally densifying. Therefore, the compatible “ice and fire” technique makes it possible to manufacture materials including but not limited to high-performance porous piezoceramics.
In this work, piezoceramics with global porosity and local compaction are obtained by the “ice and fire” process, which displays a satisfactory combination of mechanical and electrical properties. The ice pressing method is a novel compaction process with advantages such as uniform pressure distribution, wide pressure range, highly effective and selective freezing. It breaks the compaction limitation of current ceramic manufacturing methods, since there is no relevant compaction technique for porous ceramics. This study underscores the versatility and efficacy of the ice pressing method and highlights its potential as a valuable tool for manufacturing complex structures. Moreover, the ice pressing method is compatible with other manufacturing processes, like the sacrificed template, gel casting, additive manufacturing, etc. Thus, applications in thermal insulation, catalyst substrates, filtration systems, and biomedical and energy storage and conversion are expected to expand. The study also explores the potential use of the Mpemba effect in creating technologically relevant materials that can rapidly remove heat from localized sources, offering new and essential strategies for materials engineering.
To prepare piezocomposites based on the porous PZT framework, uncured polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS, Sylgard 184, Dow Corning Co., Ltd) with 10 wt% curing agent is fully mixed and then vacuumed to remove the bubbles. Then the prepared piezoceramic framework is immersed in uncured PDMS until the piezoceramic framework is fully infiltrated with uncured PDMS. After curing at 70 °C for 2 h, the PZT composite is finally obtained. With silver film sputtered as the electrode and PDMS film spin coated as the protective layer, the prepared PZT device is polarized at 85 °C for 1 hour under an electric field of 5 kV mm−1 and then naturally cooled down to room temperature.
δ are detected using a high-temperature dielectric property test system (DPTS-AT-600, Wuhan Yanhe Technology Co., Ltd). To assess the piezoelectric behavior of the samples, an Asylum Cypher ES AFM system is used in the DART mode to minimize noise and topography crosstalk. A conductive Nano world Arrow-EFM probe with Pt/Ir coating on both cantilever and tip, featuring a nominal resonance frequency of 75 kHz and nominal stiffness of 3 N m−1, is used for all PFM and SKPM measurements. The contact resonance frequency is around 50 kHz. To determine the effective piezoelectric coefficient d33 of the composites, a small area of 1 × 1 μm2 is scanned under AC voltages ranging from 0.2 to 3 V. The open circuit output voltage of porous composite is measured using a digital oscilloscope (Rohde & Schwarz RTE1024) and the force is detected using a mechanical force sensor. A vibration generator is used to generate controllable oscillation frequency and compressing force.
Footnotes |
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d3mh01869e |
| ‡ These authors are co-first authors in this work. |
| This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2024 |