Ceramic composition and properties
Ceramic composition and properties:
Ceramic composition
and properties, atomic and molecular nature of ceramic materials and their resulting
characteristics and performance in industrial applications. Industrial ceramics
are commonly understood to be all industrially used materials that are inorganic,
nonmetallic solids. Usually, they are metal oxides (that is, compounds of metallic elements and
oxygen), but many ceramics (especially advanced ceramics) are compounds of
metallic elements and carbon, nitrogen, or sulfur. In atomic structure they are
most often crystalline, although they also may contain a combination of glassy
and crystalline phases. These structures and chemical ingredients, though
various, result in universally recognized ceramic-like properties of enduring
utility, including the following: mechanical strength in spite of brittleness;
chemical durability against the deteriorating effects of oxygen, water, acids,
bases, salts, and organic solvents; hardness, contributing to resistance
against wear; thermal and electrical conductivity considerably lower than that
of metals; and an ability to take a decorative finish.
In this article, the relation between the properties of ceramics and their chemical and
structural nature is described. Before such a description is attempted, though,
it must be pointed out that there are exceptions to several of the defining
characteristics outlined above. In chemical composition, for instance, diamond and
graphite, which are two different forms of carbon, are considered to be
ceramics even though they are not composed of inorganic compounds. There also
are exceptions to the stereotypical properties ascribed to ceramics. To return
to the example of diamond, this material, though considered to be ceramic,
has a thermal conductivity higher than that of copper—a property the jeweler
uses to differentiate between
true diamond and simulants such as cubic zirconia (a single-crystal form of
zirconium dioxide). Indeed, many ceramics are quite conductive electrically.
For instance, a polycrystalline (many-grained) version of zirconia is used as
an oxygen sensor in automobile engines owing to its ionic conductivity. Also,
copper oxide-based ceramics have been shown to have superconducting properties.
Even the well-known brittleness of ceramics has its exceptions. For example,
certain composite ceramics that contain whiskers, fibers, or particulates that
interfere with crack propagation display flaw tolerance and toughness
rivaling that of metals. Nevertheless, despite
such exceptions, ceramics generally display the properties of hardness,
refractoriness (high melting point), low conductivity, and brittleness. These
properties are intimately related to certain types of chemical bonding and
crystal structures found in the material. Chemical bonding and
crystal structure are addressed in turn below.
Chemical bonds:
Underlying many of the properties found in ceramics are the strong primary bonds that hold the atoms together and form the ceramic material. These chemical bonds are of two types: they are either ionic in character, involving a transfer of bonding electrons from electropositive atoms (cations) to electronegative atoms (anions), or they are covalent in character, involving orbital sharing of electrons between the constituent atoms or ions. covalent bonds are highly directional in nature, often dictating the types of crystal structure possible. Ionic bonds, on the other hand, are entirely nondirectional. This non-directional nature allows for hard-sphere packing arrangements of the ions into a variety of crystal structures, with two limitations. The first limitation involves the relative size of the anions and the cations. Anions are usually larger and close-packed, as in the face-centered cubic (feck) or hexagonal close-packed (hcp) crystal structures found in metals. (These metallic crystal structures are illustrated in Figure 1.) Cations, on the other hand, are usually smaller, occupying interstices, or spaces, in the crystal lattice between the anions.
The second limitation on the types of crystal structure that
can be adopted by ionically bonded atoms is based on a law of physics—that the
crystal must remain electrically neutral. This law of electroneutrality results in the formation of
very specific stoichiometries—that is specific ratios of cations to anions
that maintain a net balance between positive and negative charge. In fact,
anions are known to pack around cations, and cations around anions, in order to
eliminate local charge imbalance. This phenomenon is referred to as coordination.
Most of the primary chemical bonds found in ceramic
materials are actually a mixture of ionic and covalent types. The larger the
electronegativity difference between anion and cation (that is, the greater the
difference in potential to accept or donate electrons), the more nearly ionic
is the bonding (that is, the more likely are electrons to be transferred,
forming positively charged cations and negatively charged anions). Conversely,
small differences in electronegativity lead to a sharing of electrons, as found
in covalent bonds.
Secondary bonds also are important in certain ceramics. For
example, in diamond, a single-crystal form of carbon, all bonds are primary,
but in graphite, a polycrystalline form of carbon, there are primary bonds
within sheets of crystal grains and secondary bonds between the sheets. The relatively weak secondary bonds allow the sheets to
slide past one another, giving graphite the lubricity for which it is well
known. It is the primary bonds in ceramics that make them among the strongest,
hardest, and most refractory materials known.
Crystal structure:
The crystal structure is also responsible for many of the
properties of ceramics. In Figures, 2A through 2D representative crystal
structures are shown that illustrate many of the unique features of ceramic
materials. Each collection of ions is shown in an overall box that describes
the unit cell of that structure. By
repeatedly translating the unit cell one box in any direction and by repeatedly
depositing the pattern of ions within that cell at each new position, any size
crystal can be built up. In the first structure (Figure 2A) the material shown
is magnesia (MgO), though the structure itself is referred to
as rock salt because the common table salt (sodium chloride, NaCl) has the same structure. In the
rock salt structure each ion is surrounded by six immediate neighbors of the
opposite charge (e.g., the central Mg2+ cation, which is
surrounded by O2− anions). This extremely efficient packing
allows for local neutralization of charge and makes for stable bonding. Oxides
that crystallize in this structure tend to have relatively high melting points.
(Magnesia, for example, is a common constituent in refractory ceramics.)
The second structure (Figure 2B) is called fluorite, after the mineral calcium fluoride
(CaF2), which possesses this structure—though the material shown is
urania (uriniamdioxide UO2). In
this structure, the oxygen anions are bonded to only four cations. Oxides with
this structure are well known for the ease with which oxygen vacancies can be
formed. In zirconia (zirconium
dioxide, ZrO2), which also possesses this structure, a great number
of vacancies can be formed by doping, or carefully inserting ions of a
different element into the composition. These vacancies become mobile at high
temperatures, imparting oxygen-ion conductivity to the material and making it
useful in certain electrical applications. The fluorite structure also exhibits
considerable open space, especially at the center of the unit cell. In urania,
which is used as a fuel element in nuclear reactors this openness is believed to help accommodate fission products and reduce
unwanted swelling.
The third structure (Figure 2C) is called perovskite. In most cases the perovskite structure is cubic—that is, all sides of the unit cell are the same. However,
in barium titanate (BaTiO3),
shown in the figure, the central Ti4+ cation can be induced to
move off-center, leading to a noncubic symmetry and to an electrostatic dipole,
or alignment of positive and negative charges toward opposite ends of the
structure. This dipole is responsible for the ferroelectric properties of
barium titanate, in which domains of neighboring dipoles line up in the same
direction. The enormous dielectric constants achievable with perovskite
materials are the basis of many ceramic capacitor devices.
The noncubic variations
found in perovskite ceramics introduce the concept of anisotropy —i.e., an anionic arrangement that is
not identical in all directions. In severely anisotropic materials there can be a great variation of properties. These cases are illustrated by yttrium barium
copper oxide (YBCO; chemical formula YBa2Cu3O7), shown
in Figure 2D. YBCO is a superconducting
ceramic; that is, it loses all resistance to electric current at extremely low temperatures. Its structure consists
of three cubes, with yttrium or barium at the center, copper at the corners,
and oxygen at the middle of each edge—with the exception of the middle cube,
which has oxygen vacancies at the outer edges. The critical feature in this
structure is the presence of two sheets of copper-oxygen ions, located above
and below the oxygen vacancies, along which superconduction takes place. The
transport of electrons perpendicular to these sheets is not favored, making the
YBCO structure is severely anisotropic. (One of the challenges in fabricating
crystalline YBCO ceramics capable of passing large currents is to align all the
grains in such a manner that their copper-oxygen sheets line up.)
Nonconductivity:
Ordinarily, ceramics are poor conductors of electricity and therefore make
excellent insulators. Nonconductivity arises from the lack of “free” electrons
such as those found in metals. In ionically bonded ceramics, bonding electrons
are accepted by the electronegative elements, such as oxygen, and donated by
the electropositive elements, usually a metal. The result is that all electrons are tightly bound to the
ions in the structure, leaving no free electrons to conduct electricity. In
covalent bonding, bonding electrons are similarly localized in the directional
orbitals between the atoms, and there are no free electrons to conduct
electricity.
There are two ways that ceramics can be made electrically
conductive. At sufficiently high temperatures point defects such as oxygen, vacancies can arise, leading to ionic conductivity. (This is pointed out in the
case of zirconia, above.) In addition, the introduction of certain
transition-metal elements (such as iron, copper, manganese, or cobalt),
lanthanoid elements (such as cerium), or actinoid elements (such as uranium)
can produce special electronic states in which mobile electrons or electron
holes arise. The copper-based superconductors are a good example of conductive
transition-metal oxide ceramics—in this case, conductivity arising at extremely
low temperatures.
Brittleness:
Unlike most metals, nearly all ceramics are brittle at room temperature; i.e.,
when subjected to tension, they fail suddenly, with little or no plastic deformation prior to fracture. Metals, on the other
hand, are ductile (that is, they deform and bend when subjected to stress), and
they possess this extremely useful property owing to imperfections called dislocations within their crystal lattices. There are many kinds of
dislocations. In one kind, known as an edge dislocation, an extra plane of atoms can be
generated in a crystal structure, straining to the breaking point
the bonds that hold the atoms together. If stress were applied to this
structure, it might shear along a plane where the bonds were weakest, and the
dislocation might slip to the next atomic position, where the bonds would be
re-established. This slipping to a new position is at the heart of plastic
deformation. Metals are usually ductile because dislocations are common and are
normally easy to move. In ceramics, however,
dislocations are not common (though they are not nonexistent), and they are
difficult to move to a new position. The reasons for this lie in the nature of
the bonds holding the crystal structure together. In ionically bonded ceramics
some planes—such as the so-called (111) plane shown slicing diagonally through the rock salt structure in Figure 3, top—contain only one kind of ion and are
therefore unbalanced in their distribution of charges. Attempting to insert
such a half-plane into a ceramic would not favor a stable bond unless a half-plane of the oppositely charged ion was also inserted. Even in the case of
planes that were charge-balanced—for instance, the (100) plane created by a
vertical slice down the middle of the rock salt crystal structure, as shown in
Figure 3, bottom—slip induced along the middle would bring identically charged
ions into proximity. The identical charges would repel each other, and
dislocation motion would be impeded. Instead, the material would tend to
fracture in the manner commonly associated with brittleness.
In order for polycrystalline materials to be ductile, they
must possess more than a minimum number of independent slip systems—that is,
planes or directions along which slip can occur. The presence of slip systems
allows the transfer of crustal deformations from one grain to the next. Metals
typically have the required number of slip systems, even at room temperature.
Ceramics, however, do not, and as a result, they are notoriously brittle.
Glasses, which lack a long-range periodic crystal structure
altogether, are even more susceptible to brittle fracture than ceramics.
Because of their similar physical attributes (including brittleness) and
similar chemical constitutes (e.g., oxides), inorganic glasses are considered to be
ceramics in many countries of the world. Indeed, partial melting during the
processing of many ceramics results in a significant glassy portion in the
final makeup of many ceramic bodies (for instance, porcelains), and this
portion is responsible for many desirable properties (e.g., liquid
impermeability). Nevertheless, because of their unique processing and
application, glasses are treated separately in the article industrial glass.
Powder processing:
Unlike metals and glasses, which can be cast from the melt and subsequently rolled, drawn, or pressed into shape, ceramics must be made from powders. As pointed out above, ceramics are seldom deformable, especially at room temperature, and the microstructural modifications achieved by cold-working and recrystallizing metals are impossible with most ceramics. Instead, ceramics are usually made from powders, which are consolidated and densified sintering. Sintering is a process whereby particles bond and coalesce under the influence of heat, leading to shrinkage and reduction in porosity. A similar process in metal manufacturing is referred to as powder metallurgy.
Powder processing is used to make products that are normally
identified as traditional ceramics—namely, whitewares such as porcelain and
china, structural clay products such as brick and tile, refractories for insulating and lining
metallurgical furnaces and glass tanks, abrasives, and cement. It also is used
in the production of advanced ceramics, including ceramics for electronic,
magnetic, optical, nuclear, and biological applications. Traditional ceramics
involve large volumes of product and relatively low value-added manufacturing.
Advanced ceramics, on the other hand, tend to involve smaller volumes of
product and higher value-added manufacturing.
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