Carousel Previous. Carousel Next. What is Scribd? Explore Ebooks. Bestsellers Editors' Picks All Ebooks. Explore Audiobooks. Bestsellers Editors' Picks All audiobooks. Explore Magazines. Editors' Picks All magazines. Explore Podcasts All podcasts. Difficulty Beginner Intermediate Advanced. Explore Documents. Glass and Ceramics PDF. Did you find this document useful?
Is this content inappropriate? Report this Document. Flag for inappropriate content. Download now. Save Save Glass and Ceramics. Original Title: Glass and Ceramics. Related titles. Carousel Previous Carousel Next. Jump to Page. Search inside document. Cooker tops, ceramic composites B Rashid, Dept of MME, BUET MME LEC30 Page 17 Traditional Vitreous Ceramics pottery, porcelain, tiles, structural and refractory bricks are still made by processes very similar to those of years ago formed into shape using clays in wet, plastic state, which is then dried and fired for crystallization and vitrification fired products consist of a glassy phase based on SiO2 which melts and glues together a complex polycrystalline multiphase mostly silicates body.
Documents Similar To Glass and Ceramics. Siddhartha Bogawat. Samar Rashid. Ibad Bin Rashid. Nadym Gulam Rasul. Malyadam Pada. Michelle Hsieh. Edgardo Chavez Bello. Dian Asty. Bibhuti Prasad. Omarbin Bracho.
Popular in Materials. Abey Francis. Vartika Uprety. Igor Nonato. Anmol Yadav. Mahamood Ali. Satrio Utomo. Dyeing Dyeing. Wruisberg Kablan. All rights reserved. Published simultaneously in Canada. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, or otherwise, except as permitted under Section or of the United States Copyright Act, without either the prior written permission of the Publisher, or authorization through payment of the appropriate per-copy fee to the Copyright Clearance Center, Inc.
No warranty may be created or extended by sales representatives or written sales materials. The advice and strategies contained herein may not be suitable for your situation. You should consult with a professional where appropriate. For general information on our other products and services or for technical support, please contact our Customer Care Department within the United States at , outside the United States at or fax Wiley also publishes its books in a variety of electronic formats.
Some content that appears in print may not be available in electronic formats. For more information about Wiley products, visit our web site at www. ISBN hardback 1. Beall, G. H65 In this regard, readers are given a deeper understanding of inorganic solid-state chemistry through the examination of crystalline phase formation reac- tions.
The authors have attached great importance to recording these crystal phase formation processes in close relation to the primary glass phases using a wide variety of analytical methods and to clearly presenting their work.
Here, special attention is given to the application of glass-ceramics as materials with special optical properties and biomaterials for dental application. Also, new composite mate- rials, containing glass-ceramics and high-strength polycrystalline ceramics, as well as on new bioactive materials that have been developed to replace bone, are reported.
While writing their individual sec- tions, they consulted intensively with each other on the different aspects of phase formation, and the development of properties and applications. Nesper, F. Krumeich, M. Apel, C. Ritzberger, V. Sakamoto Nippon Electric Glass Co. Fuchs South Africa is thanked for the translation work.
Ritzberger is specially thanked for his technical experience in the preparation of the second edition of this textbook. Beall would like to acknowledge the thoughtful assistance of L. He would also credit D. Morse, M. Badrinarayan, and I. Cornejo for their continued support of research on glass-ceramics at Corning Incorporated. Furthermore, the authors would like to express their appreciation to A. That means rendering them faster, economically more favorable, and better in quality.
At the same time, new materials are introduced to increase our general quality of life, especially as far as human medicine and dentistry, or our daily life, for example, housekeeping, are concerned. Among all these new materials, one group plays a very special role: glass- ceramic materials.
They offer the possibility of combining the special properties of conventional sintered ceramics with the distinctive characteristics of glasses. It is, however, pos- sible to develop modern glass-ceramic materials with features unknown thus far in either ceramics or glasses, or in other materials, such as metals or organic polymers.
Furthermore, developing glass-ceramics demonstrates the advantage of combining various remarkable properties in one material. A few examples may illustrate this statement. As will be shown in the book, glass-ceramic materials consist of at least one glass phase and at least one crystal phase.
Processing of glass-ceramics is carried out by controlled crystallization of a base glass. By precipitating crystal phases in the base glass, however, new, exceptional characteristics are achieved.
New high-strength, metal-free glass-ceramics will be presented for dental restoration. It is therefore a book for students, scientists, engineers, and technicians. Furthermore, the monograph is intended to serve as a reference for all those inter- ested in natural or medical science and technology, with special emphasis on glass- ceramics as new materials with new properties. Chapters 1, 2, and 3, in turn, supply in-depth information on the various types of glass-ceramic material.
Therefore, Chapter 4 of the book focuses on the various possibilities of glass-ceramic materials in technical, consumer, optical, medical, dental, electrical, electronic, and architectural applications, as well as uses for coating and soldering. This chapter is arranged like a reference book.
It contains elements of all three categories and is thus likely to appeal to a broad readership the world over. As the contents of the book are arranged along various focal points, readers may approach the book in a differentiated manner.
For instance, engineers and students of materials science and technology will follow the given structure of the book, beginning at Chapter 1 to read it. Thus, if they want to know more details on the material microstructure, chemical composition, and crystals , they will read Sections 4. The authors would like to thank the following scientists who helped with this book project by providing technical publications on the topic of glass-ceramic research and development T.
Kokubo, J. Abe, M. Wada and T. Kasuga all from Japan J. Petzoldt, W.
0コメント