Polymer-derived ceramics
Polymer-derived ceramics are ceramic materials formed by the pyrolysis of preceramic polymers, usually under inert atmosphere.
The compositions of PDCs most commonly include silicon carbide, silicon oxycarbide, silicon nitride, silicon carbonitride and silicon oxynitride. The composition, phase distribution and structure of PDCs depend on the polymer precursor compounds used and the pyrolysis conditions applied.
The key advantage of this type of ceramic material is the versatility afforded by the use of polymeric precursors in terms of processing and shaping. Polymer-derived ceramics can be additively manufactured by means of fused filament fabrication, stereolithography that uses photopolymerization of preceramic polymers. Such processing of PDCs is used in applications requiring thermally and chemically stable materials in complex shapes such as cellular ceramics structures that are challenging to achieve through more conventional ceramic processing routes, such as powder sintering and slip casting. PDCs are also valuable for synthesis of porous and mesoporous materials and thin films.
Chemistry
PDCs are mainly fabricated through the pyrolysis of preceramic polymers.In the families of preceramic polymers, polysiloxanes are the most famous preceramic polymers. The backbones comprise silicon and oxygen atoms. Polysiloxanes are polysiloxanes with organic groups in the backbones, e.g., polyborosiloxanes, poly. Another important category of preceramic polymers are polycarbosilanes and polycarbosilanes, containing alternating carbon and silicone atoms in the backbones. Similarly, polymers made up of Si-N bonds are classified as polysilazane, poly and poly. Different polymer compositions influence processing temperatures, microstructure transitions, ceramic yields and stabilities.
The conversion of preceramic polymers to PDCs can be divided into four phases, shaping, cross-linking, pyrolysis, crystallization. Typically, PDC processing is completed at 1100 °C-1300 °C. To form a crystalline PDC, some materials require higher temperature to crystalize, usually over 1700 °C.
Properties
PDCs are characteristic with many properties, including:- Mechanical properties: high hardness, modulus and strength.
- Stability in extreme environments: good thermostability, high oxidation and corrosion resistance.
- Adhesion properties: high adhesive attraction and low surface tension.
- Durability: wear resistance, anti-fouling and anti-biofilm formation properties.
- Low toxicity and biocompatibility.