Ceramic components for engineering applications are generally produced by the powder route. Residual stress and inhomogeneities in the process can result in defects and hence affect the component properties. As a result, a full understanding of the material constitutive modeling governing the sintering process is necessary.
In the present work, we examined the constitutive laws of the sintering mechanisms and identified the most appropriate constitutive relationship and mechanism for stage 1 of sintering of Al2O3 ceramics. With this identified constitutive relationship, sintering potential involved during sintering can be found and the process can be improved.
To identify the dominant constitutive law and corresponding sintering mechanism, pure alumina powder was used as raw material and two sintering methods (free sintering and hot pressing) were employed. Experiments were designed in such a way that the results can be used to determine the sintering potential and verify the appropriate sintering mechanism. It was concluded that interface reaction controlled sintering dominates the stage 1 of sintering in our selected experiment parameters.