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Ceramics Kulinich Ekaterina, Ph.D, Chair of Silicate Technology and Nanotechnology

Ceramics Kulinich Ekaterina, Ph.D, Chair of Silicate Technology and Nanotechnology

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Page 1: Ceramics Kulinich Ekaterina, Ph.D, Chair of Silicate Technology and Nanotechnology

CeramicsKulinich Ekaterina, Ph.D, Chair of Silicate Technology and

Nanotechnology

Page 2: Ceramics Kulinich Ekaterina, Ph.D, Chair of Silicate Technology and Nanotechnology

Сeramics -

is an inorganic, non-metallic solid material prepared by the action of heat and next cooling. Ceramic materials have a crystalline or partly crystalline structure

Page 3: Ceramics Kulinich Ekaterina, Ph.D, Chair of Silicate Technology and Nanotechnology

Ceramic materials are brittle, hard, strong in compression, weak in shearing and tension

Page 4: Ceramics Kulinich Ekaterina, Ph.D, Chair of Silicate Technology and Nanotechnology

Ceramics in general stable in very high temperatures (from 1,000°C to 1,600°C).

Page 5: Ceramics Kulinich Ekaterina, Ph.D, Chair of Silicate Technology and Nanotechnology

Traditional ceramic raw materials include: -clay minerals (kaolinite)-aluminiumoxide (feldspare)-silica (sand)

Page 6: Ceramics Kulinich Ekaterina, Ph.D, Chair of Silicate Technology and Nanotechnology

The word "ceramic" comes from the Greek word κεραμικός (keramikos) meaning pottery

- domestic- industrial- building- technical- art objects

Page 7: Ceramics Kulinich Ekaterina, Ph.D, Chair of Silicate Technology and Nanotechnology

Types of ceramic products (4 groups:)

Structural ceramics (bricks, pipes, floor and roof tiles

Refractories ceramics (kiln linings, fire radiants, steel and glass making crucibles)

Whitewares (tableware, wall tiles, pottery products, and sanitary ware)

Technical Ceramics (Space Shuttle program, ballistic protection, nuclear fuel pellets, bio-medical implants, blades, and bombs)

Page 8: Ceramics Kulinich Ekaterina, Ph.D, Chair of Silicate Technology and Nanotechnology

Whiteware ceramics Bone china

calcined cattle bone (bone ash)

Characteristics:high whiteness, translucency and strength

Page 9: Ceramics Kulinich Ekaterina, Ph.D, Chair of Silicate Technology and Nanotechnology

Production of bone china usually involves a two stages:

firing of bisque (items without a glaze) at the temperature 1280 °C

glaze (glost) fired at a lower temperature (below 1080 °C)

Page 11: Ceramics Kulinich Ekaterina, Ph.D, Chair of Silicate Technology and Nanotechnology

Porcelain is a ceramic material made by heating raw materials, generally including clay in the form of kaolin, in a kiln by the temperatures from1,200 °C to 1,400 °C.

Page 12: Ceramics Kulinich Ekaterina, Ph.D, Chair of Silicate Technology and Nanotechnology

Classification of technical ceramics

Oxides ceramics: alumina, zirconia

Non-oxides ceramics: Carbides, borides, nitrides, silicides

Composites: сombinations of oxides and non-oxides.

Page 13: Ceramics Kulinich Ekaterina, Ph.D, Chair of Silicate Technology and Nanotechnology

Other applications of ceramics

knives

Page 14: Ceramics Kulinich Ekaterina, Ph.D, Chair of Silicate Technology and Nanotechnology

Ball bearings Ceramic balls can be used to replace steel

in ball bearings

Page 15: Ceramics Kulinich Ekaterina, Ph.D, Chair of Silicate Technology and Nanotechnology

ceramic engine (which can run at a temperature of

over 3300°C)

Page 16: Ceramics Kulinich Ekaterina, Ph.D, Chair of Silicate Technology and Nanotechnology

Bio-ceramics-dental implants -synthetic bones- coatings - bone fillers

Page 17: Ceramics Kulinich Ekaterina, Ph.D, Chair of Silicate Technology and Nanotechnology

Main objects

Definition of ceramics History of ceramics Types of ceramics Using of ceramics

Page 18: Ceramics Kulinich Ekaterina, Ph.D, Chair of Silicate Technology and Nanotechnology

Thank you for your attention