Gelcasting
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Gel casting is a direct foaming technique used to produce ceramic and polymeric scaffolds.


History

Gel casting was developed in Canada in the 1960s and ever since it became an interesting manufacturing forming process for near-net-shape, very large, high-quality, complex ceramic parts with specified threshold strength.


Process

In this technique, the precursor materials typically consist of a monomer, cross linker, free radical initiator or catalysts are placed into an aqueous suspension. Such precursor conforms to a slurry that is then foamed before it undergoes a direct consolidation step. In this step, the binder becomes polymerized to consolidate the particle structure within the precursor slurry. The process then forms a gel type of mixture, which is then cast into a proper mould. The next step, after the gel solidification, it is removed from the mould in a controlled manner and then being dried to form a green body. The outcome here has interesting mechanical properties and is capable of being machined at this step. Eventually, the binder is burnt out and the final scaffold sintering will take place.


References


Further reading

* A. Lottermoser, ''Uber das Ausfrieren von Hydrosolen'', Chemische Berichte, 41, 1908, 532–540


See also

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Freeze gelation Freeze-gelation, is a form of sol-gel processing of ceramics that enables a ceramic object to be fabricated in complex shapes, without the need for high-temperature sintering. The process is similar to freeze-casting. The process is simple, but th ...
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Colloidal crystal A colloidal crystal is an ordered array of colloid particles and fine grained materials analogous to a standard crystal whose repeating subunits are atoms or molecules. A natural example of this phenomenon can be found in the gem opal, where sphere ...
Casting (manufacturing) Ceramics {{ceramics-stub