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UNIT-2: Ceramics and Composites

Ceramic materials can be crystalline or partly crystalline and inorganic non-metallic materials. Ceramics tend to be strong, stiff, brittle, chemically inert, and non-conductors of heat and electricity. Advanced ceramics are used in industries such as medicine, electrical, and aerospace. Ceramic materials can be categorized as crystalline ceramics which are formed by reaction or forming powders and sintering, or non-crystalline ceramics which are glasses formed from melts. Ceramics have poor toughness due to their ionic or covalent bonding but can withstand very high temperatures and some ceramics are semiconductors or superconductors.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
45 views

UNIT-2: Ceramics and Composites

Ceramic materials can be crystalline or partly crystalline and inorganic non-metallic materials. Ceramics tend to be strong, stiff, brittle, chemically inert, and non-conductors of heat and electricity. Advanced ceramics are used in industries such as medicine, electrical, and aerospace. Ceramic materials can be categorized as crystalline ceramics which are formed by reaction or forming powders and sintering, or non-crystalline ceramics which are glasses formed from melts. Ceramics have poor toughness due to their ionic or covalent bonding but can withstand very high temperatures and some ceramics are semiconductors or superconductors.

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Sathish Kumar
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© © All Rights Reserved
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UNIT-2

CERAMICS AND COMPOSITES


POWDER METALLURGY
Modern Ceramic materials:

Ceramic material, inorganic, non-metallic materials ,may


be crystalline or partly crystalline.
Clay was one of the earliest materials used to produce ceramics,
as pottery, but many different ceramic materials include aluminium
oxide, more commonly known as alumina are now used in domestic,
industrial and building products.
Ceramic materials tend to be strong, stiff, brittle, chemically inert, and
non-conductors of heat and electricity, but their properties vary widely.
Ceramics generally can withstand very high temperatures such as
temperatures that range from 1,000 C to 1,600 C (1,800 F to
3,000 F).
For example, porcelain is widely used to make electrical insulators, but
some ceramic compounds are superconductors.
The modern ceramic materials include silicon carbide and tungsten
carbide. Both are valued for their abrasion resistance.
Advanced ceramics are also used in the medicine, electrical, and
aerospace industries.
Types of ceramic materials
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, or by "forming" powders into the desired
shape, and thensinteringto form a solid body.
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 taffy-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 aglass-ceramic.
PROPERTIES
Mechanical properties
Ceramic materials are usually ionic or covalent bonded materials,
and can be crystalline or amorphous. A material held together by either type
of bond will tend to fracture before any plastic deformation takes place,
which results in poor toughness in these materials.
It is therefore neglected in many applications of ceramic materials.
Electrical properties
Semiconductors
Some ceramics are semiconductors. Most of these are transition
metal oxides , such as zinc oxide. While there are prospects of mass-
producing blue LEDs from zinc oxide
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.
Superconductivity
Under some conditions, such as extremely low temperature, some
ceramics exhibit high temperature superconductivity.

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