Abstract
Aluminum foam is a class of porous materials; in which closed pores are produced by a
gas generation in liquid (or semi-liquid) aluminum. Aluminum foams are, generally, fabricated by
heating a foamable precursor (a powder compact consisting of aluminum and TiH2 powders).
Decomposition of TiH2, which is followed by a hydrogen gas release, produces bubbles in molten
aluminum. In this research, aluminum foam was fabricated with the help of a chemical
exothermic reaction. Titanium and boron carbide (B4C) powders were blended in the Al-TiH2
precursor as reactive powder elements. When one end of the precursor was heated, a strong
exothermic reaction between titanium and B4C took place (3Ti + B4C 2TiB2 +TiC + 761KJ), and
the neighboring part of the precursor was heated by the heat of reaction. Hence, once the reaction
happens at the end of the precursor, it propagates spontaneously throughout the precursor. The
blowing process takes place at the same time as the reaction because aluminum melts and TiH2
decomposes by the heat of reaction. The advantage of this process is that the energy to make
aluminum foam is not necessarily supplied form the external source, but generated form inside of
the precursor. Therefore the blowing process is self sustainable (Self-Blowing Process). In this
work, the effect of processing parameters on the Self-Blowing Process was observed. The
processing parameters we focused on were blending ratio of the starting powders (aluminum, TiH2,
titanium, B4C) and heating methods.
Publisher
Trans Tech Publications, Ltd.
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics,General Materials Science
Cited by
1 articles.
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