March 1, 2005
Journal Article

Silver-Copper Oxide Based Reactive Air Braze (RAB) for Joining Yttria-Stabilized Zirconia

Abstract

We are investigating a new method of ceramic-to-metal joining, referred to as reactive air brazing (RAB), as a potential method of sealing ceramic components in high-temperature electrochemical devices. Sessile drop wetting experiments and joint strength testing were conducted using yttria stabilized zirconia (YSZ) substrates and CuO-Ag based air brazes. Results from our studies indicate that the wettability of the braze improves substantially with increasing CuO content, over a compositional range of 1 - 8 mol% CuO, which is accompanied by an increase in the bend strength of the corresponding brazed YSZ joint. The addition of a small amount of TiO2 (0.5 mol%) to the CuO-Ag braze further improves wettability due to the formation of a titanium zirconate reaction product along the braze/substrate interface. However, with one notable exception, the bend strength of these ternary braze joints remained nearly identical to those measured in comparable binary braze joints. SEM analysis conducted on the corresponding fracture surfaces indicated that in the binary braze joints the failure occurs primarily at the braze/YSZ interface. Similarly in the case of the the ternary, TiO2-doped brazes joint failure occurs predominantly along the interface between the braze filler metal and the underlying titanium zirconate reaction layer.

Revised: June 23, 2011 | Published: March 1, 2005

Citation

Kim J.Y., J.S. Hardy, and K.S. Weil. 2005. Silver-Copper Oxide Based Reactive Air Braze (RAB) for Joining Yttria-Stabilized Zirconia. Journal of Materials Research 20, no. 3:636-643. PNNL-SA-42714.