“…ilicon oxycarbide ceramics, in which silicon, oxygen, and carbon are incorporated into an amorphous network structure, have attracted increasing attention, especially for processing ceramic foams, [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8] coatings, and thin films for functional parts, [9][10][11] and synthesizing nano-sized SiC particles 12) and cost-effective long fibers, 13,14) due to their improved mechanical and chemical properties compared to amorphous SiO 2 . 15,16) However, because of the excessively large shrinkage and weight loss during the pyrolysis and densification of these ceramics, it is difficult to prepare dense, monolithic SiOC ceramics.…”