Chapter 12: Ceramics Flashcards
Ceramics
Metal–nonmetal compound with covalent and/or ionic bonding. Usually a metallic oxide, carbide, nitride, fluoride, boride, or sulfide.
Ceramic properties ()
Stiff and brittle, hard (wear resistant), lightweight, corrosion resistant (chemically inert), high melting point (strong primary bonds). Electrical insulators. Creep at higher temperatures than metals and only under compression.
Sintering
Densification of powder at a high temperature (lower than Tm) by reducing the surface area. Part becomes densified and has higher strength and very little porosity.
Powder processing steps for crystalline or glass ceramics (6)
- Grinding
- Consolidation
- Green forming
- Binder removal
- Sintering
- Hot isostatic pressing
Grinding
Grind raw materials to produce a fine particle size. This is raw powder.
Consolidation
Mixing powder with polymeric binders.
Green forming
Pressing, extruding, injection molding powder into a desired shape. The added polymers liquefy and hold the ceramic particles close together.
Green compact
Low strength and low density shaped powder.
Binder removal
Slowly heating a green compact to burn out the binder
Hot isostatic pressing
Heat treatments to remove internal closed porosity. Heated at a high pressure temperature to deform the grain structure and close pores.
Cementation
Chemical reaction to form a hard ceramic.
Portland cement
Mix of clay and lime bearing calcinated to 1400°C. Primary constituents: tri-calcium silicate and di-calcium silicate.
Hydration of cement
Produces a paste which sets and hardens (forms).
Packing of ceramics
Less dense than metals, because neither covalent nor ionic bonds produce close packing.
Brittleness of ceramics
Brittle in tension since there is no dislocation motion to accompany stress increases around flaws (with ionic or covalent bonding dislocation motion is very difficult). Strong in compression.