Ceramic Materials
Ceramic Materials
Ceramic Materials
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2 Properties of ceramics
o
2.2.1 Semiconductors
2.2.2 Superconductivity
4 See also
5 References
6 Further reading
7 External links
[edit]Types
of ceramic materials
Traditional ceramic raw materials include clay minerals such as kaolinite, more recent
materials include aluminium oxide, more commonly known as alumina. The modern
ceramic materials, which are classified as advanced ceramics, include silicon carbide
and tungsten carbide. Both are valued for their abrasion resistance, and hence find use
in applications such as the wear plates of crushing equipment in mining operations.
Advanced ceramics are also used in the medicine, electrical and electronics industries.
[edit]Crystalline
ceramics
Crystalline ceramic materials are not amenable to a great range of processing. Methods
for dealing with them tend to fall into one of two categories - either make the ceramic in
the desired shape, by reaction in situ, or by "forming" powders into the desired shape,
and then sintering to form a solid body. Ceramic forming techniques include shaping by
hand (sometimes including a rotation process called "throwing"), slip casting, tape
casting (used for making very thin ceramic capacitors, etc.), injection moulding, dry
pressing, and other variations. (See also Ceramic forming techniques. Details of these
processes are described in the two books listed below.) A few methods use a hybrid
between the two approaches.
[edit]Non-crystalline
ceramics
Non-crystalline ceramics, being glasses, tend to be formed from melts. The glass is
shaped when either fully molten, by casting, or when in a state of toffee-like viscosity, by
methods such as blowing to a mold. If later heat-treatments cause this glass to become
partly crystalline, the resulting material is known as a glass-ceramic.
[edit]Properties
of ceramics
The physical properties of any ceramic substance are a direct result of its crystalline
structure and chemical composition. Solid state chemistry reveals the fundamental
connection between microstructure and properties such as localized density variations,
grain size distribution, type of porosity and second-phase content, which can all be
correlated with ceramic properties such as mechanical strength by the Hall-Petch
equation, hardness, toughness, dielectric constant, and the optical properties exhibited
by transparent materials.
Physical properties of chemical compounds which provide evidence of chemical
composition include odor, color, volume, density (mass / volume), melting point, boiling
point, heat capacity, physical form at room temperature (solid, liquid or gas), hardness,
porosity, and index of refraction.
[edit]Mechanical
properties
Mechanical properties are important in structural and building materials as well as textile
fabrics. They include the many properties used to describe thestrength of materials
such as: elasticity / plasticity, tensile strength, compressive strength, shear
decreasing the toughness further, and reducing the tensile strength. These combine to
give catastrophic failures, as opposed to the normally much more gentle failure
modes of metals.
These materials do show plastic deformation. However, due to the rigid structure of the
crystalline materials, there are very few available slip systems for dislocations to move,
and so they deform very slowly. With the non-crystalline (glassy) materials, viscous flow
is the dominant source of plastic deformation, and is also very slow. It is therefore
neglected in many applications of ceramic materials.
To overcome the brittle behaviour, ceramic material development has introduced the
class of ceramic matrix composite materials, in which ceramic fibers are embedded and
with specific coatings are forming fiber bridges across any crack. This mechanism
substantially increases the fracture toughness of such ceramics. The ceramic disc
brakes are, for example using a ceramic matrix composite material manufactured with a
specific process.
[edit]Electrical
properties
[edit]Semiconductors
Some ceramics are semiconductors. Most of these are transition metal oxides that are
II-VI semiconductors, such as zinc oxide.
While there are prospects of mass producting blue LEDs from zinc oxide, ceramicists
are most interested in the electrical properties that show grain boundary effects.
One of the most widely used of these is the varistor. These are devices that exhibit the
property that resistance drops sharply at a certain threshold voltage. Once the voltage
across the device reaches the threshold, there is a breakdown of the electrical structure
in the vicinity of the grain boundaries, which results in its electrical resistance dropping
from several megohms down to a few hundred ohms. The major advantage of these is
that they can dissipate a lot of energy, and they self reset after the voltage across the
device drops below the threshold, its resistance returns to being high.
This makes them ideal for surge-protection applications, as there is control over the
threshold voltage and energy tolerance, they find use in all sorts of applications. The
best demonstration of their ability can be found in electrical substations, where they are
employed to protect the infrastructure from lightning strikes. They have rapid response,
are low maintenance, and do not appreciably degrade from use, making them virtually
ideal devices for this application.
Semiconducting ceramics are also employed as gas sensors. When various gases are
passed over a polycrystalline ceramic, its electrical resistance changes. With tuning to
the possible gas mixtures, very inexpensive devices can be produced.
[edit]Superconductivity
The Meissner effect demonstrated by levitating a magnet above a cuprate superconductor, which is
cooled by liquid nitrogen
Under some conditions, such as extremely low temperature, some ceramics exhibit high
temperature superconductivity. The exact reason for this is not known, but there are two
major families of superconducting ceramics.
Silicon nitride rocket thruster. Left: Mounted in test stand. Right: Being tested with H 2/O2 propellants
[edit]Optical
properties
In the early 1970s, Thomas Soules pioneered computer modeling of light transmission
through translucent ceramic alumina. His model showed that microscopic pores in
ceramic, mainly trapped at the junctions of microcrystalline grains, caused light
to scatter and prevented true transparency. The volume fraction of these microscopic
pores had to be less than 1% for high-quality optical transmission.
This is basically a particle size effect. Opacity results from the incoherent scattering of
light at surfaces and interfaces. In addition to pores, most of the interfaces in a typical
metal or ceramic object are in the form of grain boundaries which separate tiny regions
of crystalline order. When the size of the scattering center (or grain boundary) is
reduced below the size of the wavelength of the light being scattered, the scattering no
longer occurs to any significant extent.
In the formation of polycrystalline materials (metals and ceramics) the size of
the crystalline grains is determined largely by the size of the crystalline particles present
in the raw material during formation (or pressing) of the object. Moreover, the size of
the grain boundaries scales directly with particle size. Thus a reduction of the original
particle size below the wavelength of visible light (~ 0.5 micrometers for shortwave
violet) eliminates any light scattering, resulting in a transparent material.
Recently[when?], Japanese scientists have developed techniques to produce ceramic parts
that rival the transparency of traditional crystals (grown from a single seed) and exceed
the fracture toughness of a single crystal.[citation needed] In particular, scientists at the
Japanese firm Konoshima Ltd., a producer of ceramic construction materials and
industrial chemicals, have been looking for markets for their transparent ceramics.
Livermore researchers realized that these ceramics might greatly benefit highpowered lasers used in the National Ignition Facility (NIF) Programs Directorate. In
particular, a Livermore research team began to acquire advanced transparent ceramics
from Konoshima to determine if they could meet the optical requirements needed for
Livermores Solid-State Heat Capacity Laser (SSHCL).[citation needed] Livermore researchers
have also been testing applications of these materials for applications such as
advanced drivers for laser-driven fusion power plants.
[edit]Examples
of ceramics materials
Ceramic BN crucible
Until the 1950s, the most important ceramic materials were (1) pottery, bricks and tiles,
(2) cements and (3) glass. A composite material of ceramic and metal is known
as cermet.
[edit]See
also
Ceramic
Ceramic art
Ceramic engineering
Ceramics processing
Colloid
Colloidal crystal
Nanotechnology
Nanomaterials
Nanoparticle
Photonic crystal
Sol-gel
Thin-film optics
[edit]References
1. ^ Ceramic Tile and Stone Standards
2. ^ John B. Wachtman, Jr., ed., Ceramic Innovations in the
20th century, The American Ceramic Society, 1999, ISBN
978-1-57498-093-6.
3. ^ Garvie, R. C.; Hannink, R. H.; Pascoe, R. T. (1975).
"Ceramic steel?". Nature 258 (5537): 703
704. Bibcode 1975Natur.258..703G. doi:10.1038/258703a
0.
[edit]Further
reading
[edit]External
links
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Dielectrics
Materials
Ceramic materials
Ceramics
Ceramic engineering
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