Expert-level ceramics covering ceramic bonding, processing, mechanical properties, thermal properties, electronic ceramics, and ceramic applications in engineering.
Ionic bonding: electropositive metal and electronegative nonmetal, strong and directional. Covalent bonding: shared electrons, very strong, directional, brittle. Crystal structures: NaCl, ZnS, fluorite, perovskite common ceramic structures. Silicate structures: SiO4 tetrahedra share corners, forms glasses and minerals. Point defects: Schottky and Frenkel defects control ionic conductivity.
Powder synthesis: solid state, sol-gel, hydrothermal, precipitation routes. Forming: die pressing, slip casting, injection molding, tape casting. Sintering: densification by solid state diffusion at high temperature. Hot pressing: simultaneous pressure and temperature, higher density than pressureless. Chemical vapor deposition: thin film ceramic coatings for wear and temperature.
Brittleness: ceramics fail by fracture not yielding, no dislocation plasticity at room temperature. Fracture toughness: KIc typically 1 to 10 MPa sqrt m, much lower than metals. Weibull statistics: variability in ceramic strength, Weibull modulus m. Toughening: transformation toughening in ZrO2, crack bridging, fiber reinforcement. Hardness: very high, second only to diamond for hardest ceramics.
Piezoelectric: PZT generates voltage under stress, used in sensors and actuators. Ferroelectric: spontaneous polarization, switchable, capacitors, memory. Superconducting ceramics: YBCO at 92K, high temperature superconductors. Thermal barrier coatings: YSZ on turbine blades, low thermal conductivity.
| Pitfall | Fix |
|---|---|
| Applying metal design rules to ceramics | Use probabilistic design for brittle materials |
| Ignoring moisture sensitivity | Many ceramics degrade in moist environments via slow crack growth |
| Poor sintering atmosphere control | Oxygen partial pressure affects stoichiometry and properties |
| Thermal shock from rapid temperature change | Design for gradual heating or use shock-resistant grades |