Polycrystalline α-alumina / yttrium-aluminum garnet (YAG) fibers were prepared from aqueous solutions of aluminum formoacetate and yttrium acetate, with α‑Al2O3 nanoparticles as a seeding material. α‑Al2O3/YAG fiber production was achieved via dry-spinning, using polyvinylpyrrolidone as a spinning aid, followed by calcination and sintering of as-spun fibers at various temperature, dwell time and heating ramp. X-ray diffraction analysis evidenced the formation of transitional Al2O3 and yttrium-aluminum perovskite (YAP) phases (1000 – 1300 °C) before a full conversion to α‑Al2O3 / YAG (76 / 24 wt%) at 1500 °C. Full densification required temperatures of at least 1400-1500 °C with a sufficient dwell time (30 min), while increasing sintering temperature induced grain growth. Depending on the thermal treatment, tensile strength and creep factor m of the related fibers could be tailored, either to higher strength at 1400 °C (up to 1149 MPa, m = 0.57) or higher creep at 1500 °C (up to 906 MPa, m = 0.69).
Vergnaud et al. (Tue,) studied this question.