Dictionary Definition
ceramic adj : of or relating to or made from a
ceramic; "a ceramic dish" n : an artifact made of hard brittle
material produced from nonmetallic minerals by firing at high
temperatures
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
Ceramic was borrowed from the French word, ceramique in the 19th century. This derives from the Greek word keram(os), which means potter's clay.Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -æmɪk
Adjective
- made of material produced by the high temperature firing of
inorganic, nonmetallic rocks and minerals.
- A ceramic vase stood on the table.
Translations
of or pertaining to ceramic as material
- Czech: keramický
- Finnish: keraaminen
- Italian: ceramico
Noun
- A hard brittle material that is produced through burning of
nonmetallic minerals at
high temperatures
- Joan made the dish of ceramic.
- An object made of this material
- Joe had dozens of ceramics in his apartment.
Translations
material
- Bosnian: keramika
- Bulgarian: керамика (keramika)
- Catalan: ceràmica
- Chinese: 陶瓷 (táocí)
- Croatian: keramika
- Czech: keramica
- Dutch: keramiek
- German: Keramik
- Greek: κεραμική (keramiki)
- Finnish: keramiikka
- French: céramique
- Hebrew: קרמיקה (qeramiqa)
- Italian: ceramica
- Japanese: 陶器, 陶芸品
- Malaysian: seramik
- Polish: ceramika
- Portuguese: cerâmica
- Russian: керамика (keramika)
- Serbian:
- Swedish: keramik
- Spanish: ceramica
- Ukrainian: кераміка (keramika)
object
- Finnish: keramiikkaesine
Related terms
References
- Krueger, Dennis (December 1982). "Why On Earth Do They Call It Throwing?" Studio Potter Vol. 11, Number 1.http://www.studiopotter.org/articles/?art=art0001
Extensive Definition
The word ceramic is derived from the Greek word
κεραμικός (keramikos). The term covers inorganic non metallic materials which are
formed by the action of heat. Up until the 1950s or so, the most
important of these were the traditional clays, made into pottery, bricks, tiles and the like, along with
cements and glass. Clay-based ceramics
are described in the article on pottery. A composite
material of ceramic and metal is known as cermet. The word ceramic can be
an adjective, and can also be used as a noun to refer to a ceramic
material, or a product of ceramic manufacture. Ceramics may also be
used as a singular noun referring to the art of making things out
of ceramic materials. The technology of manufacturing and usage of
ceramic materials is part of the field of ceramic
engineering.
Many ceramic materials are hard, porous, and
brittle. The study and development of ceramics includes methods to
mitigate problems associated with these characteristics, and to
accentuate the strengths of the materials as well as to investigate
novel applications.
The
American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) defines a
ceramic article as “''an article having a glazed or unglazed body
of crystalline or
partly crystalline structure, or of glass, which body is produced
from essentially inorganic, non-metallic substances and either is
formed from a molten mass which solidifies on cooling, or is formed
and simultaneously or subsequently matured by the action of the
heat.”
Types of ceramic materials
For convenience ceramic products are usually divided into four sectors, and these are shown below with some examples:- Structural, including bricks, pipes, floor and roof tiles
- Refractories, such as kiln linings, gas fire radiants, steel and glass making crucibles
- Whitewares, including tableware, wall tiles, decorative art objects and sanitary ware
- Technical'', is also known as Engineering, Advanced, Special, and in Japan, Fine Ceramics. Such items include tiles used in the Space Shuttle program, gas burner nozzles, ballistic protection, nuclear fuel uranium oxide pellets, bio-medical implants, jet engine turbine blades, and missile nose cones. Frequently the raw materials do not include clays.
Examples of whiteware ceramics
- Bone china
- Earthenware, which is often made from clay, quartz and feldspar.
- Porcelain, which are often made from kaolin
- Stoneware
Classification of technical ceramics
Technical ceramics can also be classified into three distinct material categories:Each one of these classes can develop unique
material properties
Examples of technical ceramics
- Barium titanate (often mixed with strontium titanate) displays ferroelectricity, meaning that its mechanical, electrical, and thermal responses are coupled to one another and also history-dependent. It is widely used in electromechanical transducers, ceramic capacitors, and data storage elements. Grain boundary conditions can create PTC effects in heating elements.
- Bismuth strontium calcium copper oxide, a high-temperature superconductor
- Boron nitride is structurally isoelectronic to carbon and takes on similar physical forms: a graphite-like one used as a lubricant, and a diamond-like one used as an abrasive.
- Ferrite (Fe3O4), which is ferrimagnetic and is used in the magnetic cores of electrical transformers and magnetic core memory.
- Lead zirconate titanate is another ferroelectric material.
- Magnesium diboride (MgB2), which is an unconventional superconductor.
- Sialons / Silicon Aluminium Oxynitrides, high strength, high thermal shock / chemical / wear resistance, low density ceramics used in non-ferrous molten metal handling, weld pins and the chemical industry.
- Silicon carbide (SiC), which is used as a susceptor in microwave furnaces, a commonly used abrasive, and as a refractory material.
- Silicon nitride (Si3N4), which is used as an abrasive powder.
- Steatite (magnesium silicates) is used as an electrical insulator.
- Uranium oxide (UO2), used as fuel in nuclear reactors.
- Yttrium barium copper oxide (YBa2Cu3O7-x), another high temperature superconductor.
- Zinc oxide (ZnO), which is a semiconductor, and used in the construction of varistors.
- Zirconium dioxide (zirconia), which in pure form undergoes many phase changes between room temperature and practical sintering temperatures, can be chemically "stabilized" in several different forms. Its high oxygen ion conductivity recommends it for use in fuel cells. In another variant, metastable structures can impart transformation toughening for mechanical applications; most ceramic knife blades are made of this material.
Properties of ceramics
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. Additionally, because these materials tend to be porous, the pores and other microscopic imperfections act as stress concentrators, 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.
Electrical properties
Semiconductors
There are a number of ceramics that are semiconductors. Most of these are transition metal oxides that are II-VI semiconductors, such as zinc oxide.While there is talk of making 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.
Superconductivity
Under some conditions, such as extremely low temperature, some ceramics exhibit superconductivity. The exact reason for this is not known, but there are two major families of superconducting ceramics.Ferroelectricity and supersets
Piezoelectricity, a link between electrical and mechanical response, is exhibited by a large number of ceramic materials, including the quartz used to measure time in watches and other electronics. Such devices use both properties of piezoelectrics, using electricity to produce a mechanical motion (powering the device) and then using this mechanical motion to produce electricity (generating a signal). The unit of time measured is the natural interval required for electricity to be converted into mechanical energy and back again.The piezoelectric effect is generally stronger in
materials that also exhibit pyroelectricity, and all
pyroelectric materials are also piezoelectric. These materials can
be used to inter convert between thermal, mechanical, and/or
electrical energy; for instance, after synthesis in a furnace, a
pyroelectric crystal allowed to cool under no applied stress
generally builds up a static charge of thousands of volts. Such
materials are used in motion
sensors, where the tiny rise in temperature from a warm body
entering the room is enough to produce a measurable voltage in the
crystal.
In turn, pyroelectricity is seen most strongly in
materials which also display the ferroelectric
effect, in which a stable electric dipole can be oriented or
reversed by applying an electrostatic field. Pyroelectricity is
also a necessary consequence of ferroelectricity. This can be used
to store information in ferroelectric
capacitors, elements of ferroelectric
RAM.
The most common such materials are lead
zirconate titanate and barium
titanate. Aside from the uses mentioned above, their strong
piezoelectric response is exploited in the design of high-frequency
loudspeakers,
transducers for sonar, and
actuators for atomic
force and
scanning tunneling microscopes.
Positive thermal coefficient
Increases in temperature can cause grain boundaries to suddenly become insulating in some semiconducting ceramic materials, mostly mixtures of heavy metal titanates. The critical transition temperature can be adjusted over a wide range by variations in chemistry. In such materials, current will pass through the material until joule heating brings it to the transition temperature, at which point the circuit will be broken and current flow will cease. Such ceramics are used as self-controlled heating elements in, for example, the rear-window defrost circuits of automobiles.At the transition temperature, the material's
dielectric response
becomes theoretically infinite. While a lack of temperature control
would rule out any practical use of the material near its critical
temperature, the dielectric effect remains exceptionally strong
even at much higher temperatures. Titanates with critical
temperatures far below room temperature have become synonymous with
"ceramic" in the context of ceramic capacitors for just this
reason.
Classification of ceramics
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 class to become partly
crystalline, the resulting material is known as a glass-ceramic.
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
molding, 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.
In situ manufacturing
The most common use of this method is in the production of cement and concrete. Here, the dehydrated powders are mixed with water. This starts hydration reactions, which result in long, interlocking crystals forming around the aggregates. Over time, these result in a solid ceramic.The biggest problem with this method is that most
reactions are so fast that good mixing is not possible, which tends
to prevent large-scale construction. However, small-scale systems
can be made by deposition techniques, where the various materials
are introduced above a substrate, and react and form the ceramic on
the substrate. This borrows techniques from the semiconductor
industry, such as chemical
vapour deposition, and is very useful for coatings.
These tend to produce very dense ceramics, but do
so slowly.
Sintering-based methods
The principles of sintering-based methods is simple. Once a roughly held together object (called a "green body") is made, it is baked in a kiln, where diffusion processes cause the green body to shrink. The pores in the object close up, resulting in a denser, stronger product. The firing is done at a temperature below the melting point of the ceramic. There is virtually always some porosity left, but the real advantage of this method is that the green body can be produced in any way imaginable, and still be sintered. This makes it a very versatile route.There are thousands of possible refinements of
this process. Some of the most common involve pressing the green
body to give the densification a head start and reduce the
sintering time needed. Sometimes organic binders
such as polyvinyl
alcohol are added to hold the green body together; these burn
out during the firing (at 200–350°C). Sometimes organic lubricants
are added during pressing to increase densification. It is not
uncommon to combine these, and add binders and lubricants to a
powder, then press. (The formulation of these organic chemical
additives is an art in itself. This is particularly important in
the manufacture of high performance ceramics such as those used by
the billions for electronics, in capacitors,
inductors, sensors, etc. The specialized
formulations most commonly used in electronics are detailed in the
book "Tape Casting," by R.E. Mistler, et al., Amer. Ceramic Soc.
[Westerville, Ohio], 2000.) A comprehensive book on the subject,
for mechanical as well as electronics applications, is "Organic
Additives and Ceramic Processing," by D. J. Shanefield, Kluwer
Publishers [Boston], 1996.
A slurry can be used in place of a powder, and
then cast into a desired shape, dried and then sintered. Indeed,
traditional pottery is done with this type of method, using a
plastic mixture worked with the hands.
If a mixture of different materials is used
together in a ceramic, the sintering temperature is sometimes above
the melting point of one minor component - a liquid phase
sintering. This results in shorter sintering times compared to
solid state sintering.
Other applications of ceramics
- Ceramics are used in the manufacture of knives. The blade of the ceramic knife will stay sharp for much longer than that of a steel knife, although it is more brittle and can be snapped by dropping it on a hard surface.
- Ceramics such as alumina and boron carbide have been used in ballistic armored vests to repel large-caliber rifle fire. Such plates are known commonly as small-arms protective inserts (SAPI). Similar material is used to protect cockpits of some military airplanes, because of the low weight of the material.
- Ceramic balls can be used to replace steel in ball bearings. Their higher hardness means that they are much less susceptible to wear and can often more than triple lifetimes. They also deform less under load meaning they have less contact with the bearing retainer walls and can roll faster. In very high speed applications, heat from friction during rolling can cause problems for metal bearings; problems which are reduced by the use of ceramics. Ceramics are also more chemically resistant and can be used in wet environments where steel bearings would rust. The major drawback to using ceramics is a significantly higher cost. In many cases their electrically insulating properties may also be valuable in bearings.
- In the early 1980s, Toyota researched production of an adiabatic ceramic engine which can run at a temperature of over 6000 °F (3300 °C). Ceramic engines do not require a cooling system and hence allow a major weight reduction and therefore greater fuel efficiency. Fuel efficiency of the engine is also higher at high temperature, as shown by Carnot's theorem. In a conventional metallic engine, much of the energy released from the fuel must be dissipated as waste heat in order to prevent a meltdown of the metallic parts. Despite all of these desirable properties, such engines are not in production because the manufacturing of ceramic parts in the requisite precision and durability is difficult. Imperfection in the ceramic leads to cracks, which can lead to potentially dangerous equipment failure. Such engines are possible in laboratory settings, but mass-production is unfeasible with current technology.
- Work is being done in developing ceramic parts for gas turbine engines. Currently, even blades made of advanced metal alloys used in the engines' hot section require cooling and careful limiting of operating temperatures. Turbine engines made with ceramics could operate more efficiently, giving aircraft greater range and payload for a set amount of fuel.
- Recently, there have been advances in ceramics which include bio-ceramics, such as dental implants and synthetic bones. Hydroxyapatite, the natural mineral component of bone, has been made synthetically from a number of biological and chemical sources and can be formed into ceramic materials. Orthopedic implants made from these materials bond readily to bone and other tissues in the body without rejection or inflammatory reactions. Because of this, they are of great interest for gene delivery and tissue engineering scaffolds. Most hydroxy apatite ceramics are very porous and lack mechanical strength and are used to coat metal orthopedic devices to aid in forming a bond to bone or as bone fillers. They are also used as fillers for orthopedic plastic screws to aid in reducing the inflammation and increase absorption of these plastic materials. Work is being done to make strong, fully dense nano crystalline hydroxapatite ceramic materials for orthopedic weight bearing devices, replacing foreign metal and plastic orthopedic materials with a synthetic natural bone mineral. Ultimately these ceramic materials may be used as bone replacements or with the incorporation of protein collagens, synthetic bones.
- High-tech ceramic is used in watchmaking for producing watch cases. The material is valued by watchmakers for its light weight, scratch-resistance, durability and smooth touch. IWC is one of the brands that initiated the use of ceramic in watchmaking. The case of the IWC 2007 Top Gun edition of the Pilot's Watch Double chronograph is crafted in high-tech black ceramic.
See also
References
External links
- Advanced Ceramics – The Evolution, Classification, Properties, Production, Firing, Finishing and Design of Advanced Ceramics
- How pottery is made
- How sanitaryware is made
- World renowned ceramics collections at Stoke-on-Trent Museum Click on Quick Links in the right-hand column to view examples.
- The Gardiner Museum - The only museum in Canada entirely devoted to ceramics.
- Introduction, Scientific Principles, Properties and Processing of Ceramics
ceramic in Bulgarian: Керамика
ceramic in Catalan: Ceràmica
ceramic in Czech: Keramika
ceramic in Danish: Keramik
ceramic in German: Keramik
ceramic in Estonian: Keraamika
ceramic in Modern Greek (1453-): Κεραμική
ceramic in Spanish: Cerámica
ceramic in Esperanto: Ceramiko
ceramic in Persian: سرامیک
ceramic in French: Céramique
ceramic in Galician: Cerámica
ceramic in Indonesian: Keramik
ceramic in Interlingua (International Auxiliary
Language Association): Ceramica
ceramic in Italian: Ceramica
ceramic in Lithuanian: Keramika
ceramic in Hungarian: Kerámia
ceramic in Malay (macrolanguage): Seramik
ceramic in Dutch: Keramiek
ceramic in Japanese: セラミックス
ceramic in Neapolitan: Ceramica
ceramic in Norwegian: Keramikk
ceramic in Norwegian Nynorsk: Keramikk
ceramic in Occitan (post 1500): Ceramica
ceramic in Polish: Ceramika
ceramic in Portuguese: Cerâmica
ceramic in Quechua: K'apra
ceramic in Russian: Керамика
ceramic in Slovak: Keramika
ceramic in Finnish: Keraami
ceramic in Swedish: Keramik
ceramic in Thai: เซรามิก
ceramic in Turkish: Seramik
ceramic in Ukrainian: Кераміка
ceramic in Chinese: 陶瓷材料