WO1990009348A1 - Method of producing boron carbide - Google Patents

Method of producing boron carbide Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1990009348A1
WO1990009348A1 PCT/US1989/000524 US8900524W WO9009348A1 WO 1990009348 A1 WO1990009348 A1 WO 1990009348A1 US 8900524 W US8900524 W US 8900524W WO 9009348 A1 WO9009348 A1 WO 9009348A1
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WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
boron carbide
carbon
particles
heating
submicrometer
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1989/000524
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
William Rafaniello
William G. Moore
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The Dow Chemical Company
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Publication date
Application filed by The Dow Chemical Company filed Critical The Dow Chemical Company
Priority to JP1505784A priority Critical patent/JP2934648B2/en
Priority to DE68927860T priority patent/DE68927860T2/en
Priority to KR1019900702217A priority patent/KR910700199A/en
Priority to EP89906529A priority patent/EP0414803B1/en
Publication of WO1990009348A1 publication Critical patent/WO1990009348A1/en
Priority to FI904935A priority patent/FI904935A0/en

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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C01INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C01BNON-METALLIC ELEMENTS; COMPOUNDS THEREOF; METALLOIDS OR COMPOUNDS THEREOF NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASS C01C
    • C01B32/00Carbon; Compounds thereof
    • C01B32/90Carbides
    • C01B32/914Carbides of single elements
    • C01B32/991Boron carbide
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C01INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C01BNON-METALLIC ELEMENTS; COMPOUNDS THEREOF; METALLOIDS OR COMPOUNDS THEREOF NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASS C01C
    • C01B32/00Carbon; Compounds thereof
    • C01B32/90Carbides
    • C01B32/914Carbides of single elements
    • C01B32/956Silicon carbide

Definitions

  • This invention relates to a method of producing boron carbide and more particularly to a method of producing boron carbide of submicrometer size.
  • Boron carbide is a ceramic material which is used in applications requiring great hardness.
  • boron carbide is used for producing sand blasting nozzles, bearings, dies and the like.
  • U.S. Patent 2,83 2 ⁇ »651 discloses a method of producing fine 0 boron carbide of fine particle size by heating a mixture of boron oxide, carbon and magnesium.
  • the boron carbide produced by the method described in U.S. 2,834,651 is unsatisfactory for high purity
  • the temperature of firing the reactive mixture above is in the range of 1700-2100°C.
  • the reaction is generally carried out in a protective, non-interfering atmosphere such as an inert gas or a
  • 3,379,647 is that substantially all of the product is not below one micrometer in diameter micron and a uniform size distribution is not obtained.
  • 35 carbide can range anywhere from 0.5 to 150 micrometers with no control of particle size distribution. It is desired to prepare a boron carbide powder as a single phase, equiaxed crystalline product with a narrow particle size distribution so as to have optimum reactivity, by means of the carbothermic reduction of an oxide of boron. Said product could be hot pressed into a pore free, uniform fine grained B ⁇ C ceramic product without excess carbon or low melting metallic carbide impurities which are deleterious to physical properties of the final ceramic product. It is further desired to obtain a boron carbide product ' wherein substantially all, preferably at least about 95 percent by count, of the particles of boron carbide are less than 1 micrometer.
  • the invention is a method of producing boron carbide powder of submicrometer size by passing a particulate reactive mixture of a boric oxide source and a carbon source through a hot zone such that substantially all of the particles are separately and individually heated at a heating rate of at least 70°C/second to a sufficient temperature and for a sufficient length of time to form boron carbide crystals of which at least 25 percent by weight are of submicrometer size. r.
  • Figure 1 is an SEM (Scanning Electron Microscope) photomicrograph, magnified 2000 times, of the boron carbide product formed in Example 1.
  • Figure 2 is an SEM photomicrograph, magnified 2000 times, of the boron carbide powder formed in Example 3-
  • Figure 3 is a TEM (Transmission Electron Microscope) photomicrograph, magnified 55,000 times, of the boron carbide powder formed in Example 4.
  • Figure 4 is an SEM photomicrograph, magnified 12,000 times, of the boron carbide powder formed in Example 5.
  • a reactive mixture of a boric oxide source and a carbon source is heated at a sufficiently high temperature and at a sufficiently rapid rate to form a boron carbide powder having a submicrometer particle size.
  • a narrow particle size distribution of boron carbide is obtained with the method of the present invention.
  • the boric oxide source useful in the present invention may be boric oxide itself or any boron- containing material which upon heating will form boric oxide.
  • the boric oxide source used in the present invention is boron oxide (B2O3) or boric acid (H3BO3) which upon heating forms B2O3.
  • the boric oxide source includes any intermediates formed during thermal decomposition of boric acid to B2O3 such as HB02 « Mixtures of boric oxide sources can be employed.
  • the carbon source useful in the present invention may be any carbon-containing material which upon heating will form carbon.
  • the carbon source used in the present invention is of high purity with a low content of heavy metals.
  • the heavy metals include, for example, iron (Fe), chromium (Cr), and nickel (Ni).
  • the purity of the carbon used in the present invention should be such that the final boron carbide product contains less than 500 ppm o ⁇ Fe and preferably less than 200 ppm of Fe.
  • carbon sources which are produced* from thermal decomposition of hydrocarbons to yield carbon particles having specific surface area values of 7 square meters per gram (m2/g) to 2000 m 2 /g have been used successfully.
  • Reactive carbons of high purity are made from cornstarch by controlled decomposition or from the thermal decomposition of a predominantly vinylidene chloride polymer such as Saran ® and have a surface area of 700 m2/g or 1400 m2/g, respectively.
  • the carbon source used in the present invention is a relatively inexpensive and readily available carbon source such as starch.
  • carbon sources include, for example, acetylene carbon black, carbon black sold under the trade name Vulcan XC-72 by Cabot Corporation, carbon black sold under the -trade name Cancarb N991-UP by International Minerals Company, Saran ® carbon and mixtures thereof.
  • the starting materials be substantially free of magnesium.
  • the reaction preferably is conducted in the substantial absence of magnesium metal.
  • a reactive mixture of a boric oxide sour-ce such as B2O3 and a carbon source such as carbon black is prepared by mechanically mixing together the boric oxide source and carbon source in amounts sufficient to form theoretical B ⁇ C.
  • the reactive mixture herein referred to as the boron carbide precursor, is then heated at a reaction temperature for a sufficient length of time in accordance with the present invention to form Bi j C.
  • the reaction carried out upon heating of the starting materials may be represented by the following empirical formula:
  • substantially complete reaction of the carbon is desired to eliminate any "free carbon" in the boron carbide product. It has been found that the presence of free carbon in a ceramic body produced from the boron carbide product, for example, by a hot pressing process, can be very detrimental to the physical properties of the ceramic body such as hardness and fracture toughness.
  • a particulate boron carbide precursor is prepared and thereafter heated at the reaction temperature for a sufficient length of time necessary to form the Bj j C in accordance with the present invention.
  • the boron carbide precursor m - may be prepared by various methods known in the art, for example, as described in U.S. Patent Nos. 3,379,647 and 3,885,022.
  • the particulate boron carbide precursor is formed by contacting a boric oxide-forming material and a carbon source in an
  • the aqueous mixture is heated at temperatures of 180°C to 1300°C, preferably 300°C to 800°C to form the solid reactive mass.
  • the precursor is heated in a hot zone to * cause the reaction of B2O3 with carbon to form Bi
  • the reaction is carried out at a reaction temperature' of 1550°C to 2000°C, preferably at a temperature of 35 1600°C to 1900°C. Temperatures lower than T550°C may result in the production of larger than submicrometer crystals of boron carbide or low yields of submicrometer crystals.
  • the reaction temperature at the high end of the temperature range is limited only by the Bj j C product fusing or sintering together.
  • the heating method of the present invention is an important feature of the invention.
  • the particles of the reactive mixture of boric oxide and carbon, from the outer surface of the particle to its innermost portion, must be individually and separately brought up to the reaction temperature in a short period of time, i.e. in a matter of seconds, to produce submicrometer size boron carbide.
  • the intimate mixture of boron oxide and carbon is preferably rapidly heated to a reaction temperature which is hundreds of degrees centigrade higher than the reaction initiation temperature of approximately 1350°C.
  • the mixture is maintained at the reaction temperature for a sufficient length of time to substantially complete the reaction to form submicrometer boron carbide.
  • the particle size of the feed material must be small enough to allow the particle interior to also follow the rapid heating rate necessary for producing submicrometer crystals.
  • the precursor material Prior to heating the precursor material to the reaction temperature, the precursor material is preferably ground to a particle size of less than 2000 micrometers, more preferably, less than 50 micrometers. Heat transfer to the interior of large, i.e. 20 mm, particles or large agglomerates of finer particles will not occur at a sufficiently high rate to exclusively form submicrometer particles. For example, a 3 inch
  • the same boric oxide-carbon mixture feed material may be ground to 1 to 2 mm and fed continuously into a 1700°C crucible at a rate which allows the individual particles to be heated to the surrounding temperature in several seconds with the result that no large crystals are formed and the product is entirely submicrometer boron carbide.
  • a steady feed rate of well dispersed feed particles in a hot zone is preferred.
  • the heating apparatus used in the present invention may be any type of heater known in the art for heating particles to the reaction temperatures and at the heating rates in accordance with the invention.
  • a tubular-type reactor such as disclosed in U.S. Patent 4,056,602 may be used in the present" invention.
  • the material is fed into the reactor, for example, using a screw feeder and the like, and is allowed to fall to the hot zone of the reactor by gravity and pass through the hot zone to a collection point.
  • the particles are heated at a rapid rate and form B ⁇ C particles substantially immediately upon contacting the hot zone.
  • the heating rate employed is at least 70°C/sec or higher.
  • the rate of heating the reactive mass preferably is 70°C/sec to 100,000°C/sec, and more preferably is 200°C/sec to 10,000°C/sec.
  • the feed size and particle dispersion is somewhat more critical because of the limited time available for heating the falling particles. It has been found that large, i.e. 1-2 mm, feed particles will not be heated to a reaction temperature of 2000°C in the time it takes to fall through a 6 inch (15.2 cm) diameter by 6 feet (1.83 m) high vertical tubular reactor. Particles about 200 micrometers will heat up and partially react while particles less than 50 micrometers can be heated and completely reacted in less than two seconds. The particle size and feed rate must be matched to the heat transfer limitations of the reactor system to allow each particle to be heated to the reaction temperature in several seconds where the temperature is maintained at greater than 1550°C.
  • fine powders such as the 50 micrometer intimate mixture of boric oxide-carbon tend to agglomerate to much larger sized aggregates which can negate the rapid heating rate necessary for producing submicrometer B
  • a helical screw feeder can be observed to discharge agglomerates initially of a size related to the lead of the screw and at an intermittent rate coincident with the rotation rate of the screw. Dispersion of these agglomerates in a carrier gas before entering the furnace will aid in obtaining the uniform high heating rate essential for a narrow particle size distribution of submicrometer B ⁇ C crystals.
  • the dispersed feed particles can reagglomerate after entering the reactor if temperature zones are
  • a preferred embodiment of the present invention is preparing an intimate boric oxide-carbon reactive mix of a particle size which can be rapidly heated to . the reaction temperature in a matter of seconds, metering said feed mix at a uniform rate to a flowing 0 inert gas stream where deagglomeration by mechanical or pneumatic means occurs such that the particles are dispersed, flowing the dispersed feed particles through a cooled pipe maintained below the melting point of the boron oxide phase and then passing the feed particles
  • the boron carbide produced by the method of the present invention is a fine powder of submicrometer size.
  • the size of the majority of boron carbide 35 particles is less than 1 micrometer.
  • all of the particles are less than 1 micrometer in size.
  • the particles are 0.05 micrometer to 0.45 micrometer in size.
  • the submicrometer particles preferably are monodispersed, non-agglomerated and equiaxed particles, such as those shown in Figure 2.
  • One advantage of obtaining the submicrometer particles of the present invention is that no further grinding is necessary before the particles are used in a process for forming a ceramic body. For example, after washing the boron carbide particles to remove excess B2O3, the B 2 C particles can be used directly in forming ceramic products by hot pressing or pressureless sintering.
  • the particle size distribution of the boron carbide produced is narrower than other methods in the art. For example, about 95 percent by count of the particles will be one micrometer or less and about 75 percent by count may be 0.5 micrometers or less.
  • the boron carbide product typically has at least 25 percent submicrometer particles, preferably at least 50 percent, more preferably at least 65 percent, still more preferably at least 80 percent, even more preferably at least 90 percent, and most preferably at least 95 percent submicrometer particles. It is preferred that the maximum particle size is less than 8 micrometers, and more preferably less than 3 micrometers.
  • Substantially all of the boron carbide produced by the method of the present invention contains a boron to carbon (B:C) ratio near the theoretical formula B ⁇ C and the boron carbide is substantially free of excess carbon.
  • the boron carbide powder produced by the method of the present invention may be used, for example, in making sand blasting nozzles, and other . articles by techniques well-known in the art such as hot pressing and pressureless sintering.
  • a boric acid solution was prepared by adding 27 lb (12.25 kg) of boric acid (H3BO3) to 62.5 lb (28.35 kg) of water under constant stirring in a stainless steel vessel.
  • 19 lb (8.62 kg) of corn starch was dispersed in 62.5 lb (28.35 kg) of" water.
  • the starch-water mixture was added to the boric acid solution while heating the resultant slurry.
  • the resultant slurry reached a temperature of 8 ⁇ °C, the slurry was pumped into Teflon ® -lined stainless st ⁇ el trays.
  • the thickness of slurry layered in the trays was about 1 inch (2.5 cm) thick or less.
  • the trays were placed in a drying oven and allowed to dry at 120°C for 24 hours wherein a dried flake was formed.
  • the dried flake was removed from the trays by scrapirtg and calcined in a box furnace at 925°C for 4.5 hours in a nitrogen atmosphere.
  • the calcined material consisted of a reactive mass of boric oxide and carbon. The calcined material was crushed and screened -12 mesh
  • a graphite resistance furnace equipped with a water cooled copper feed tube was used in this example.
  • the feed tube was positioned 5 inches (12.7 cm) above a 7 inch (17.8 cm) diameter by 7 inch (17.8 cm) high graphite crucible.
  • the entire system was evacuated and back filled with argon to obtain a nitrogen and oxygen- free inert atmosphere.
  • the furnace temperature was increased to the control point of 1685°C.
  • the graphite crucible was heated in the sealed graphite resistance furnace to 1685°C.
  • An 1100 g sample of the boron carbide precursor was fed into the hot crucible for 4 hours, at a rate of 4.6 g/min. The furnace was then allowed to cool to room temperature
  • the boron carbide product consisted of soft aggregates of equiaxed boron carbide crystals which were 0.35 micrometer ⁇ 0.12 micrometer in size and which had a boron to carbon ratio of 4.05:1.
  • the boron carbide was produced at a
  • Figure 1 is representative of the boron carbide powder formed in Example 1 above and shows both soft aggregates and dispersed crystals.
  • the particle size distribution of the product, including the soft agglomerates " is given in Table I.
  • the particle size distribution of the product is given in Table I.
  • a boric acid solution was prepared by adding 36.5 lb (16.56 kg) of technical grade H3BO3 to 90 lb (40.82 kg) of water in a 50 U.S. gallon (189.3 liter)
  • a mixture of 60 g of boric acid and 20 g of , 0 Vulcan XC-72 carbon black was added to 250 ml volume of water while heating and stirring the water to its boiling point to ensure solution of the boric acid.
  • the solution was further heated and the water evaporated, recrystallizing the boric acid in the 35 presence of the carbon slurry until a thick paste was obtained.
  • the paste of boric acid, water and carbon was placed in an oven overnight at 170°C to dry the free moisture and partially dehydrate the boric acid.
  • the dried mass was placed on a Grafoil ® boat inside a 4 inch (10.16 cm) I.D. quartz tube which was purged with nitrogen.
  • the tube was heated to 800°C to convert the boron oxide hydrates-carbon mix to a B2 ⁇ 3 ⁇ carbon intimate mixture.
  • the product was cooled in nitrogen.
  • the B2 ⁇ 3-c rbon intimate mixture was ground in a mortar to a 100 to 400 micrometer sized powder, about 0.5 g of the mixture was loaded in a drop charge apparatus consisting of a inch (1.27 cm) stainless
  • ⁇ 3Q was about 900°C per second.
  • a boron carbide precursor was prepared by dry 35 mixing boric acid powder and acetylene carbon black followed by calcining the mixture in nitrogen to dehydrate and melt B2O3 to form an intimate mix with the carbon. Assay of the precursor showed 64.4 percqnt B2O3 and 34.7 percent C, with a 12 percent excess of B2O3. The mix was milled and screened to a free flowing powder which was less than 100 micrometers.
  • a vertical 4.5 inch (11.43 cm) I.D. x 24 incl (60.96 cm) long graphite tube furnace was heated to 2000°C.
  • the precursor prepared above was fed continuously into the top of the furnace with a .s.crew feeder via a vertical 1/2 inch (1.27 cm) water cooled copper feed pipe which terminated 5 inches (12.70 cm) above the hot zone.
  • the cold particulate feed along 1 with an argon flow exited the feed tube into a reactor zone at 2000°C which is above the minimum temperature of approximately 1350°C required for the carbon reduction of B2O3.
  • This arrangement reduced the agglomeration of feed material which can occur at reactor wall temperatures higher than the melting point of B2O3 > (300-500°C) and lower than the minimum reaction . -" temperatures.
  • the feed particles rapidly approached the wall temperature of 2000°C at an average heating rate of about 1000°C to about 2000°C/second.
  • the time of reaction was three to four seconds based on the reactor volume divided by the actual volumetric flow rate of the argon purge plus the carbon monoxide reaction gas.
  • the reacted particles fell through a cooled section of the graphite tube and the connecting water cooled stainless steel pipe into a product collection system which was double valved to allow periodic removal of the product during continuous reaction.
  • the crude product of the reaction was finely divided BjC surrounded and intimately mixed with submicrometer to micrometer sized excess B2O3.
  • An intimate mix of active carbon and B2O3 was prepared by mixing a 20 percent boric acid solution containing a weight ratio of 57.1 parts H3BO3 to 42.9 parts of corn starch, heating to 90°C; pumping the viscous mix onto pans in a tray drier operating at 120°C to make a boric acid-starch flake and calcining the flake up to 800°C in nitrogen to form B2 ⁇ 3-carbon intimate mixture.
  • the cooled mixture was crushed and ground to -12 mesh (1410 micrometers) for feeding via a screw feeder into a crucible maintained at 1580°C ⁇ 40°C.
  • the feed rate was 0.3 g/min.
  • the apparatus used was identical to the drop tube arrangement except for the screw feeder connection at the top of the tube.
  • the feed particles could be observed with an optical pyrometer falling from the tube hitting the bottom of the 1580°C crucible and heating to the background temperature in 2 to 10 seconds.
  • cold feed particles were landing on previously reacted feed with the heat up time averaging 2 seconds.
  • the feed was shut off and 3 minutes later the atmosphere cleared.
  • the power was then shut off and the reaction mass cooled in argon.
  • a grey Bj j C product was obtained consisting of submicrometer and uniform sized crystals.
  • Figure' - is representative of the boron carbide powder formed in Example 5 above. The heat rate of the feed was approximately 755°C/sec.

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Abstract

A method of producing submicrometer size boron carbide powder by heating a reactive mixture containing a boric oxide source and a carbon source at a high temperature for a sufficient length of time to form submicrometer particles of uniform size.

Description

METHOD OF PRODUCING BORON CARBIDE
This invention relates to a method of producing boron carbide and more particularly to a method of producing boron carbide of submicrometer size.
Boron carbide (B^C) is a ceramic material which is used in applications requiring great hardness. For example, boron carbide is used for producing sand blasting nozzles, bearings, dies and the like. For some applications, it is important and desirable to use
10 high purity, monodispersed boron carbide powder having a size of less than one micrometer because such powders, for example, when subjected to a hot-pressing process for forming ceramic products, yield a higher -r- quality ceramic part.
There are a number of methods in the art for producing a boron carbide powder. For example, U.S. Patent 2,832τ»651 discloses a method of producing fine 0 boron carbide of fine particle size by heating a mixture of boron oxide, carbon and magnesium. The boron carbide produced by the method described in U.S. 2,834,651 is unsatisfactory for high purity
25 applications because the boron carbide is contaminated with the magnesium starting material and, even after repeated digestions with hot mineral acids, some magnesium remains.
Very fine powders of boron carbide have been produced by vapor phase reactions of boron compounds with carbon or hydrocarbons, using laser or plasma energy sources. These reactions tend to form highly reactive amorphous powders. Due to their extreme
10 reactivity, handling in inert atmospheres may be required to avoid excessive oxygen and nitrogen contamination. These very fine powders have extremely low bulk densities which make loading hot press dies lt- and processing greenware difficult.
A carbothermic reduction of boron oxide is described in U.S. Patent No. 3,379,647, in which a reactive mixture comprising a carbon source, such as 20 finely divided carbon, and a boron oxide source, such as a boron oxide, is fired at a relatively high temperature, whereby the boron oxide is reduced to boron carbide.
25 Generally, the temperature of firing the reactive mixture above is in the range of 1700-2100°C.
The reaction is generally carried out in a protective, non-interfering atmosphere such as an inert gas or a
30 vacuum. A major shortcoming of the method of U.S.
3,379,647 is that substantially all of the product is not below one micrometer in diameter micron and a uniform size distribution is not obtained. In the aforementioned process, the particle size of boron
35 carbide can range anywhere from 0.5 to 150 micrometers with no control of particle size distribution. It is desired to prepare a boron carbide powder as a single phase, equiaxed crystalline product with a narrow particle size distribution so as to have optimum reactivity, by means of the carbothermic reduction of an oxide of boron. Said product could be hot pressed into a pore free, uniform fine grained B^C ceramic product without excess carbon or low melting metallic carbide impurities which are deleterious to physical properties of the final ceramic product. It is further desired to obtain a boron carbide product' wherein substantially all, preferably at least about 95 percent by count, of the particles of boron carbide are less than 1 micrometer.
The invention is a method of producing boron carbide powder of submicrometer size by passing a particulate reactive mixture of a boric oxide source and a carbon source through a hot zone such that substantially all of the particles are separately and individually heated at a heating rate of at least 70°C/second to a sufficient temperature and for a sufficient length of time to form boron carbide crystals of which at least 25 percent by weight are of submicrometer size. r.
Figure 1 is an SEM (Scanning Electron Microscope) photomicrograph, magnified 2000 times, of the boron carbide product formed in Example 1.
Figure 2 is an SEM photomicrograph, magnified 2000 times, of the boron carbide powder formed in Example 3- Figure 3 is a TEM (Transmission Electron Microscope) photomicrograph, magnified 55,000 times, of the boron carbide powder formed in Example 4.
Figure 4 is an SEM photomicrograph, magnified 12,000 times, of the boron carbide powder formed in Example 5.
In accordance with one embodiment of the present invention a reactive mixture of a boric oxide source and a carbon source is heated at a sufficiently high temperature and at a sufficiently rapid rate to form a boron carbide powder having a submicrometer particle size. A narrow particle size distribution of boron carbide is obtained with the method of the present invention.
The boric oxide source useful in the present invention may be boric oxide itself or any boron- containing material which upon heating will form boric oxide. Preferably, the boric oxide source used in the present invention is boron oxide (B2O3) or boric acid (H3BO3) which upon heating forms B2O3. The boric oxide source includes any intermediates formed during thermal decomposition of boric acid to B2O3 such as HB02« Mixtures of boric oxide sources can be employed.
The carbon source useful in the present invention may be any carbon-containing material which upon heating will form carbon. Preferably, the carbon source used in the present invention is of high purity with a low content of heavy metals. The heavy metals include, for example, iron (Fe), chromium (Cr), and nickel (Ni). Preferably, the purity of the carbon used in the present invention should be such that the final boron carbide product contains less than 500 ppm o© Fe and preferably less than 200 ppm of Fe.
Commercial carbon sources which are produced* from thermal decomposition of hydrocarbons to yield carbon particles having specific surface area values of 7 square meters per gram (m2/g) to 2000 m2/g have been used successfully. Reactive carbons of high purity are made from cornstarch by controlled decomposition or from the thermal decomposition of a predominantly vinylidene chloride polymer such as Saran® and have a surface area of 700 m2/g or 1400 m2/g, respectively. Preferably, the carbon source used in the present invention is a relatively inexpensive and readily available carbon source such as starch. Other carbon sources include, for example, acetylene carbon black, carbon black sold under the trade name Vulcan XC-72 by Cabot Corporation, carbon black sold under the -trade name Cancarb N991-UP by International Minerals Company, Saran® carbon and mixtures thereof.
As stated hereinabove, it is not desirable to have magnesium present in the reaction due to the difficulty involved in removing magnesium from the product. Therefore, it is preferred that the starting materials be substantially free of magnesium. The reaction preferably is conducted in the substantial absence of magnesium metal.
In carrying out one method of the present invention, a reactive mixture of a boric oxide sour-ce such as B2O3 and a carbon source such as carbon black, is prepared by mechanically mixing together the boric oxide source and carbon source in amounts sufficient to form theoretical B^C. The reactive mixture, herein referred to as the boron carbide precursor, is then heated at a reaction temperature for a sufficient length of time in accordance with the present invention to form BijC. The reaction carried out upon heating of the starting materials may be represented by the following empirical formula:
Figure imgf000008_0001
Preferably, in carrying out the above reaction, substantially complete reaction of the carbon is desired to eliminate any "free carbon" in the boron carbide product. It has been found that the presence of free carbon in a ceramic body produced from the boron carbide product, for example, by a hot pressing process, can be very detrimental to the physical properties of the ceramic body such as hardness and fracture toughness.
In carrying out the method of the present invention, complete reaction of the carbon is difficult because the reaction by-product, carbon monoxide, carries volatile boric oxide species away from the reaction site. It has been found that when stoichiometric quantities of B2O3 are used, free carbon contaminates the final B^C powder product. It is, therefore, advantageous to use an excess amount of B2O3 in the reaction to minimize the amount (<1 percent) of free carbon present in the product. After the reaction is carried out, any residual 32O3 may be recycled to produce more B^C. Preferably, an excess of 0 to 50 percent B2O is used in the reaction and more preferably, an excess of 5 to 30 percent B2O3 may be used.
In an alternative method of the present invention a particulate boron carbide precursor is prepared and thereafter heated at the reaction temperature for a sufficient length of time necessary to form the BjjC in accordance with the present invention. The particulate boron carbide precursor
10 consists of a reactive mass containing boric oxide, or a compound which will form boric oxide upon heating, and carbon, or a carbon-containing compound which will form carbon upon heating. The boron carbide precursor m - may be prepared by various methods known in the art, for example, as described in U.S. Patent Nos. 3,379,647 and 3,885,022. Preferably, the particulate boron carbide precursor is formed by contacting a boric oxide-forming material and a carbon source in an
20 aqueous solution and intimately mixing the components. Then, the aqueous mixture is heated sufficiently to remove substantially all of the water in the mixture and thermally decompose the mixture to a solid reactive mass containing intimately mixed boric oxide and
25 carbon. The aqueous mixture is heated at temperatures of 180°C to 1300°C, preferably 300°C to 800°C to form the solid reactive mass.
30 Having formed the particulate boron carbide precursor, the precursor is heated in a hot zone to * cause the reaction of B2O3 with carbon to form Bi|C. The reaction is carried out at a reaction temperature' of 1550°C to 2000°C, preferably at a temperature of 35 1600°C to 1900°C. Temperatures lower than T550°C may result in the production of larger than submicrometer crystals of boron carbide or low yields of submicrometer crystals. The reaction temperature at the high end of the temperature range is limited only by the BjjC product fusing or sintering together.
The heating method of the present invention is an important feature of the invention. The particles of the reactive mixture of boric oxide and carbon, from the outer surface of the particle to its innermost portion, must be individually and separately brought up to the reaction temperature in a short period of time, i.e. in a matter of seconds, to produce submicrometer size boron carbide. The intimate mixture of boron oxide and carbon is preferably rapidly heated to a reaction temperature which is hundreds of degrees centigrade higher than the reaction initiation temperature of approximately 1350°C. The mixture is maintained at the reaction temperature for a sufficient length of time to substantially complete the reaction to form submicrometer boron carbide. In addition, the particle size of the feed material must be small enough to allow the particle interior to also follow the rapid heating rate necessary for producing submicrometer crystals.
Prior to heating the precursor material to the reaction temperature, the precursor material is preferably ground to a particle size of less than 2000 micrometers, more preferably, less than 50 micrometers. Heat transfer to the interior of large, i.e. 20 mm, particles or large agglomerates of finer particles will not occur at a sufficiently high rate to exclusively form submicrometer particles. For example, a 3 inch
(7.6 cm) diameter by 10 inch (25.4 cm) long cylinder of boric oxide-carbon mixture can be heated in a furnace controlled at 1750°C for one hour and fifty minutes, cooled to room temperature and examined for conversion to boron carbide. The outer 1 inch (2.5 cm) of the cylinder is reacted to form boron carbide crystals with a mixture of large, i.e. 1 to 20 micrometer, crystals. However, about 1 inch (2.5 cm) in diameter of the inner core of the cylinder remains unreacted; that is, the maximum temperature of said inner core was less than 1350°C. It is found that the resistance to heat transfer for the large mass limits the heating rate in the interior such that the predominant crystal size is 10 to 20 micrometers.
The same boric oxide-carbon mixture feed material may be ground to 1 to 2 mm and fed continuously into a 1700°C crucible at a rate which allows the individual particles to be heated to the surrounding temperature in several seconds with the result that no large crystals are formed and the product is entirely submicrometer boron carbide. For production of uniform narrow particle size distributions, a steady feed rate of well dispersed feed particles in a hot zone is preferred.
The heating apparatus used in the present invention may be any type of heater known in the art for heating particles to the reaction temperatures and at the heating rates in accordance with the invention. For example, a tubular-type reactor such as disclosed in U.S. Patent 4,056,602 may be used in the present" invention. In the tubular type reactor, the material is fed into the reactor, for example, using a screw feeder and the like, and is allowed to fall to the hot zone of the reactor by gravity and pass through the hot zone to a collection point. The particles are heated at a rapid rate and form B^C particles substantially immediately upon contacting the hot zone. The heating rate employed is at least 70°C/sec or higher. The rate of heating the reactive mass preferably is 70°C/sec to 100,000°C/sec, and more preferably is 200°C/sec to 10,000°C/sec.
For vertical tubular flow through reactors, the feed size and particle dispersion is somewhat more critical because of the limited time available for heating the falling particles. It has been found that large, i.e. 1-2 mm, feed particles will not be heated to a reaction temperature of 2000°C in the time it takes to fall through a 6 inch (15.2 cm) diameter by 6 feet (1.83 m) high vertical tubular reactor. Particles about 200 micrometers will heat up and partially react while particles less than 50 micrometers can be heated and completely reacted in less than two seconds. The particle size and feed rate must be matched to the heat transfer limitations of the reactor system to allow each particle to be heated to the reaction temperature in several seconds where the temperature is maintained at greater than 1550°C.
Those familiar with the art will recognize that fine powders such as the 50 micrometer intimate mixture of boric oxide-carbon tend to agglomerate to much larger sized aggregates which can negate the rapid heating rate necessary for producing submicrometer B|C. For example, a helical screw feeder can be observed to discharge agglomerates initially of a size related to the lead of the screw and at an intermittent rate coincident with the rotation rate of the screw. Dispersion of these agglomerates in a carrier gas before entering the furnace will aid in obtaining the uniform high heating rate essential for a narrow particle size distribution of submicrometer B^C crystals.
The dispersed feed particles can reagglomerate after entering the reactor if temperature zones are
10 encountered which are above the melting point of the boron oxide (approximately 300°C to 500°C) but below fehe 1350°C to 1400°C reaction initiation temperature.
. -- A preferred embodiment of the present invention is preparing an intimate boric oxide-carbon reactive mix of a particle size which can be rapidly heated to . the reaction temperature in a matter of seconds, metering said feed mix at a uniform rate to a flowing 0 inert gas stream where deagglomeration by mechanical or pneumatic means occurs such that the particles are dispersed, flowing the dispersed feed particles through a cooled pipe maintained below the melting point of the boron oxide phase and then passing the feed particles
25 into a reaction zone, which is at a temperature substantially above the incipient reaction temperature of boron oxide-carbon, to rapidly heat the particles to the reaction temperature at a rate which produces
3Q submicrometer boron carbide crystals.
The boron carbide produced by the method of the present invention is a fine powder of submicrometer size. The size of the majority of boron carbide 35 particles is less than 1 micrometer. Preferably, all of the particles are less than 1 micrometer in size. More preferably, the particles are 0.05 micrometer to 0.45 micrometer in size. The submicrometer particles preferably are monodispersed, non-agglomerated and equiaxed particles, such as those shown in Figure 2. One advantage of obtaining the submicrometer particles of the present invention is that no further grinding is necessary before the particles are used in a process for forming a ceramic body. For example, after washing the boron carbide particles to remove excess B2O3, the B2C particles can be used directly in forming ceramic products by hot pressing or pressureless sintering.
Another advantage of the method of the present invention is that the particle size distribution of the boron carbide produced is narrower than other methods in the art. For example, about 95 percent by count of the particles will be one micrometer or less and about 75 percent by count may be 0.5 micrometers or less. On a weight percent basis, the boron carbide product typically has at least 25 percent submicrometer particles, preferably at least 50 percent, more preferably at least 65 percent, still more preferably at least 80 percent, even more preferably at least 90 percent, and most preferably at least 95 percent submicrometer particles. It is preferred that the maximum particle size is less than 8 micrometers, and more preferably less than 3 micrometers.
Substantially all of the boron carbide produced by the method of the present invention contains a boron to carbon (B:C) ratio near the theoretical formula B^C and the boron carbide is substantially free of excess carbon. The boron carbide powder produced by the method of the present invention may be used, for example, in making sand blasting nozzles, and other . articles by techniques well-known in the art such as hot pressing and pressureless sintering.
The following examples are illustrative of the present invention and are not for the purpose of limiting the invention. Unless otherwise stated, all parts and percentages are by weight.
Example 1
Boron Carbide Precursor
A boric acid solution was prepared by adding 27 lb (12.25 kg) of boric acid (H3BO3) to 62.5 lb (28.35 kg) of water under constant stirring in a stainless steel vessel. In a separate container, 19 lb (8.62 kg) of corn starch was dispersed in 62.5 lb (28.35 kg) of" water. The starch-water mixture was added to the boric acid solution while heating the resultant slurry. When the resultant slurry reached a temperature of 8θ°C, the slurry was pumped into Teflon®-lined stainless stέel trays. The thickness of slurry layered in the trays was about 1 inch (2.5 cm) thick or less. The trays were placed in a drying oven and allowed to dry at 120°C for 24 hours wherein a dried flake was formed. The dried flake was removed from the trays by scrapirtg and calcined in a box furnace at 925°C for 4.5 hours in a nitrogen atmosphere. The calcined material consisted of a reactive mass of boric oxide and carbon. The calcined material was crushed and screened -12 mesh
(1410 micrometers) +45 mesh (325 micrometers) which formed the feed to the reactor. BijC Powder Product
A graphite resistance furnace equipped with a water cooled copper feed tube was used in this example. The feed tube was positioned 5 inches (12.7 cm) above a 7 inch (17.8 cm) diameter by 7 inch (17.8 cm) high graphite crucible. The entire system was evacuated and back filled with argon to obtain a nitrogen and oxygen- free inert atmosphere. The furnace temperature was increased to the control point of 1685°C. A screw
10 feeder was calibrated to deliver 4.6 grams per minute (g/min) of the -12 mesh (1410 micrometers) +45 (325 micrometers) mesh boron carbide precursor prepared above. The feeder was then purged with argon and
-j- connected to the furnace so that the feeder would drop feed particles down the water cooled tube into a hot graphite crucible. A flowing argon atmosphere was used during the reaction.
0 The graphite crucible was heated in the sealed graphite resistance furnace to 1685°C. An 1100 g sample of the boron carbide precursor was fed into the hot crucible for 4 hours, at a rate of 4.6 g/min. The furnace was then allowed to cool to room temperature
25 (30°C) and 176.2 g of boron carbide product was recovered in the crucible. The boron carbide recovered was washed for 24 hours in a mild HC1 solution (pH 3) at 80°C. After washing the boron carbide product,
30 174.5 g of the product remained. The boron carbide product consisted of soft aggregates of equiaxed boron carbide crystals which were 0.35 micrometer ± 0.12 micrometer in size and which had a boron to carbon ratio of 4.05:1. The boron carbide was produced at a
35 rate of 0.6 lb. Bi,C/hr/ft3 (9.6 kg BijC/hr/m3) reactor volume in a yield of 85 percent. Figure 1 is representative of the boron carbide powder formed in Example 1 above and shows both soft aggregates and dispersed crystals. The particle size distribution of the product, including the soft agglomerates", is given in Table I.
Comparative Experiment 1 - (Not an embodiment of the present invention)
60 g of boric acid, 52.5 g of sucrose and 10 ml of ethylene glycol were blended in a beaker. The uniform mixture was placed in a 175°C drying oven for 24 hours, and 67.1 g of a dry, black, glassy-looking solid precursor resulted. Then, 20 g of this solid precursor was loaded into a 2.25 inches (5.7 cm) diameter X 4 inches (10.2 cm) high graphite crucible. The crucible was placed in a furnace and inductively heated to 1900°C in 20 minutes and held at that temperature for 30 minutes. Then, the power was shut off and the furnace was allowed to cool to room temperature, An argon atmosphere was maintained in the furnace throughout the operation. The product was boron carbide and the yield was 3 grams. This experiment employs the method of
Example 3 of U.S. Patent 3,379,647. The particle size distribution of the product is given in Table I.
10
15
0
Figure imgf000018_0001
25 Example 2
Boron Carbide Precursor
A boric acid solution was prepared by adding 36.5 lb (16.56 kg) of technical grade H3BO3 to 90 lb (40.82 kg) of water in a 50 U.S. gallon (189.3 liter)
30 stainless steel reactor vessel, under constant stirring. The temperature of the reactor vessel was maintained at about 60°C. In a separate container, 26.7 lb (12.11 kg) of corn starch, food grade, was
,5 thoroughly dispersed in 90 lb (40.82 kg) of water. The corn starch-water mixture was added to the boric acid solution while heating and the resultant slurry was heated to 90°C. The slurry was pumped to a drum dryer operating at 131-139°C. A flake containing about 20 '< percent moisture was formed on the dryer. The flake was removed from the dryer and then calcined in a box furnace under a nitrogen atmosphere at 800°C. The composition of the calcined flake was approximately 66.3 percent B2O3 and 30.3 percent C. The calcined flake was ground to -10 mesh (1680 micrometers). 0
BijC Powder Product
Using an argon purged induction furnace, a 2 inch (5.08 cm) diameter by 4 inch (10.16) high graphite
15 crucible was heated to 1700°C. A calibrated screw feeder discharged the particulated feed at a rate of
0.75 g/min into a cooled tube positioned above the open crucible. After feeding for 10 minutes, the feeder was shut off while the temperature was maintained for 0 several minutes to complete the reaction, then the power was shut off. The crucible cooled to room temperature and was removed from the furnace. The product was exclusively submicrometer and greater than
97 percent Bj.C. 25
Example 3
Boron Carbide Precursor
A mixture of 60 g of boric acid and 20 g of ,0 Vulcan XC-72 carbon black was added to 250 ml volume of water while heating and stirring the water to its boiling point to ensure solution of the boric acid.
The solution was further heated and the water evaporated, recrystallizing the boric acid in the 35 presence of the carbon slurry until a thick paste was obtained. The paste of boric acid, water and carbon was placed in an oven overnight at 170°C to dry the free moisture and partially dehydrate the boric acid. The dried mass was placed on a Grafoil® boat inside a 4 inch (10.16 cm) I.D. quartz tube which was purged with nitrogen. The tube was heated to 800°C to convert the boron oxide hydrates-carbon mix to a B2θ3~carbon intimate mixture. The product was cooled in nitrogen.
BhC Powder Product
10 The B2θ3-c rbon intimate mixture was ground in a mortar to a 100 to 400 micrometer sized powder, about 0.5 g of the mixture was loaded in a drop charge apparatus consisting of a inch (1.27 cm) stainless
15 steel tube with a inch (1.27 cm) ball valve at one end, vertically positioned above a 2£ inch (5.72 cm) by x 4 inch (10.16 cm) high graphite crucible. The crucible was inductively heated to 1820°C in an argon atmosphere. The bottom ball valve was opened to drop
20 the charge into the hot crucible. The particles began reacting instantly producing enough carbon monoxide to fluidize a few red hot particles above the crucible before subsiding. After 3 minutes, the final temperature was 1780°C. The power was shut off and the
25 system cooled in argon. The B^C product was examined by SEM and the majority found to be equiaxed crystals size of 0.5 micrometer as shown in Figure 2. The heating rate of the charge to the reaction temperature
3Q was about 900°C per second.
Example 4
Boron Carbide Precursor
A boron carbide precursor was prepared by dry 35 mixing boric acid powder and acetylene carbon black followed by calcining the mixture in nitrogen to dehydrate and melt B2O3 to form an intimate mix with the carbon. Assay of the precursor showed 64.4 percqnt B2O3 and 34.7 percent C, with a 12 percent excess of B2O3. The mix was milled and screened to a free flowing powder which was less than 100 micrometers.
Bi|C Powder Product
A vertical 4.5 inch (11.43 cm) I.D. x 24 incl (60.96 cm) long graphite tube furnace was heated to 2000°C. The precursor prepared above was fed continuously into the top of the furnace with a .s.crew feeder via a vertical 1/2 inch (1.27 cm) water cooled copper feed pipe which terminated 5 inches (12.70 cm) above the hot zone. The cold particulate feed along1 with an argon flow exited the feed tube into a reactor zone at 2000°C which is above the minimum temperature of approximately 1350°C required for the carbon reduction of B2O3. This arrangement reduced the agglomeration of feed material which can occur at reactor wall temperatures higher than the melting point of B2O3 > (300-500°C) and lower than the minimum reaction . -" temperatures.
The feed particles rapidly approached the wall temperature of 2000°C at an average heating rate of about 1000°C to about 2000°C/second. The time of reaction was three to four seconds based on the reactor volume divided by the actual volumetric flow rate of the argon purge plus the carbon monoxide reaction gas. The reacted particles fell through a cooled section of the graphite tube and the connecting water cooled stainless steel pipe into a product collection system which was double valved to allow periodic removal of the product during continuous reaction. The crude product of the reaction was finely divided BjC surrounded and intimately mixed with submicrometer to micrometer sized excess B2O3.
The excess B2O3 was separated from the B^C by washing the B^C with hot water whereby the B2O3 form soluble boric acid. The washed and dried BjjC product assayed 76.5 percent boron, 20.9 percent carbon. The electromicrograph of the boron carbide powder prepared in Example above is shown in Figure 3. Figure 3 shows exclusively submicrometer particles, most being 0.1 to 0.2 micrometer.
Example 5
Boron Carbide Precursor
An intimate mix of active carbon and B2O3 was prepared by mixing a 20 percent boric acid solution containing a weight ratio of 57.1 parts H3BO3 to 42.9 parts of corn starch, heating to 90°C; pumping the viscous mix onto pans in a tray drier operating at 120°C to make a boric acid-starch flake and calcining the flake up to 800°C in nitrogen to form B2θ3-carbon intimate mixture.
B)|C Powder Product
The cooled mixture was crushed and ground to -12 mesh (1410 micrometers) for feeding via a screw feeder into a crucible maintained at 1580°C ± 40°C. The feed rate was 0.3 g/min.
The apparatus used was identical to the drop tube arrangement except for the screw feeder connection at the top of the tube. The feed particles could be observed with an optical pyrometer falling from the tube hitting the bottom of the 1580°C crucible and heating to the background temperature in 2 to 10 seconds. As the reaction continued, cold feed particles were landing on previously reacted feed with the heat up time averaging 2 seconds. The feed was shut off and 3 minutes later the atmosphere cleared. The power was then shut off and the reaction mass cooled in argon.
A grey BjjC product was obtained consisting of submicrometer and uniform sized crystals. Figure' - is representative of the boron carbide powder formed in Example 5 above. The heat rate of the feed was approximately 755°C/sec.

Claims

CLAIHS
1. A method of producing boron carbide comprising heating a particulate reactive mixture of a boric oxide source and a carbon source such that substantially all of the particles of the reactive mixture are separately and individually heated at a heating rate of at least 70°C/second to a sufficient temperature and for a sufficient length of time to form boron carbide crystals of which at least 25 percent by weight are of submicrometer size.
2. The method of Claim 1 wherein the particles of the reactive mixture are 1 to 2000 micrometers in size.
3. The method of Claim 1 wherein the heating is carried out by continuously passing said mixture through a hot zone.
4. The method of Claim 1 wherein the reactive mixture is essentially free of magnesium.
5. The method of Claim 1 wherein the temper¬ ature is 1575°C to 2100°C.
6. The method of Claim 1 wherein the rate of heating is 70°C/sec to 100,000°C/sec.
7. The method of Claim 1 wherein the boric oxide source is boric oxide or boric acid.
8. The method of Claim 1 wherein the carbon source is a carbon formed from the thermal decomposition of a hydrocarbon.
9. The method of Claim 1 wherein the carbon source is carbohydrates, methyl cellulose or sugars.
10. The method of Claim 1 wherein the carbon source is carbon black or acetylene carbon black.
11. The method of Claim 8 wherein the carbon source is vinylidene chloride polymer.
12. The method of Claim 9 wherein the carbon source is starch.
13. The method of Claim 1 wherein the boron carbide powder particles are monodispersed, non- agglomerated and equiaxed particles and all of the boron carbide particles are submicrometer in size.
14. The method of Claim 1 wherein the size of the boron carbide powder is 0.05 to 0.45 micrometer.
PCT/US1989/000524 1986-04-14 1989-02-09 Method of producing boron carbide WO1990009348A1 (en)

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