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Ceramography

Ceramography is the art and science of preparation, examination and evaluation of ceramic microstructures.[1] Ceramography can be thought of as the metallography of ceramics. The microstructure is the structure level of approximately 0.1 to 100 µm, between the minimum wavelength of visible light and the resolution limit of the naked eye. The microstructure includes most grains, secondary phases, grain boundaries, pores, micro-cracks and hardness microindentations. Most bulk mechanical, optical, thermal, electrical and magnetic properties are significantly affected by the microstructure. The fabrication method and process conditions are generally indicated by the microstructure. The root cause of many ceramic failures is evident in the microstructure. Ceramography is part of the broader field of materialography, which includes all the microscopic techniques of material analysis, such as metallography, petrography and plastography. Ceramography is usually reserved for high-performance ceramics for industrial applications, such as 85–99.9% alumina (Al2O3) in Fig. 1, zirconia (ZrO2), silicon carbide (SiC), silicon nitride (Si3N4), and ceramic-matrix composites. It is seldom used on whiteware ceramics such as sanitaryware, wall tiles and dishware.

History edit

Ceramography evolved along with other branches of materialography and ceramic engineering. Alois de Widmanstätten of Austria etched a meteorite in 1808 to reveal proeutectoid ferrite bands that grew on prior austenite grain boundaries. Geologist Henry Clifton Sorby, the "father of metallography," applied petrographic techniques to the steel industry in the 1860s in Sheffield, England.[2] French geologist Auguste Michel-Lévy devised a chart that correlated the optical properties of minerals to their transmitted color and thickness in the 1880s. Swedish metallurgist J.A. Brinell invented the first quantitative hardness scale in 1900.[3] Smith and Sandland developed the first microindentation hardness test at Vickers Ltd. in London in 1922.[4] Swiss-born microscopist A.I. Buehler started the first metallographic equipment manufacturer near Chicago in 1936. Frederick Knoop and colleagues at the National Bureau of Standards developed a less-penetrating (than Vickers) microindentation test in 1939.[5] Struers A/S of Copenhagen introduced the electrolytic polisher to metallography in 1943. George Kehl of Columbia University wrote a book that was considered the bible of materialography until the 1980s.[6] Kehl co-founded a group within the Atomic Energy Commission that became the International Metallographic Society[7] in 1967.

Preparation of ceramographic specimens edit

The preparation of ceramic specimens for microstructural analysis consists of five broad steps: sawing, embedding, grinding, polishing and etching. The tools and consumables for ceramographic preparation are available worldwide from metallography equipment vendors and laboratory supply companies.

Sawing edit

Most ceramics are extremely hard and must be wet-sawed with a circular blade embedded with diamond particles. A metallography or lapidary saw equipped with a low-density diamond blade is usually suitable.[8][citation needed] The blade must be cooled by a continuous liquid spray.[8]

Embedding edit

To facilitate further preparation, the sawed specimen is usually embedded (or mounted or encapsulated) in a plastic disc, 25, 32 or 38 mm in diameter.[9][citation needed] A thermosetting solid resin, activated by heat and compression, e.g. mineral-filled epoxy, is best for most applications. A castable (liquid) resin such as unfilled epoxy, acrylic or polyester may be used for porous refractory ceramics or microelectronic devices.[10] The castable resins are also available with fluorescent dyes that aid in fluorescence microscopy. The left and right specimens in Fig. 3 were embedded in mineral-filled epoxy. The center refractory in Fig. 3 was embedded in castable, transparent acrylic.

Grinding edit

Grinding is abrasion of the surface of interest by abrasive particles, usually diamond, that are bonded to paper or a metal disc. Grinding erases saw marks, coarsely smooths the surface, and removes stock to a desired depth. A typical grinding sequence for ceramics is one minute on a 240-grit metal-bonded diamond wheel rotating at 240 rpm and lubricated by flowing water, followed by a similar treatment on a 400-grit wheel. The specimen is washed in an ultrasonic bath after each step.[9][citation needed]

Polishing edit

Polishing is abrasion by free abrasives that are suspended in a lubricant and can roll or slide between the specimen and paper. Polishing erases grinding marks and smooths the specimen to a mirror-like finish. Polishing on a bare metallic platen is called lapping. A typical polishing sequence for ceramics is 5–10 minutes each on 15-, 6- and 1-µm diamond paste or slurry on napless paper rotating at 240 rpm. The specimen is again washed in an ultrasonic bath after each step. The three sets of specimens in Fig. 3 have been sawed, embedded, ground and polished.

Etching edit

Etching reveals and delineates grain boundaries and other microstructural features that are not apparent on the as-polished surface. The two most common types of etching in ceramography are selective chemical corrosion, and a thermal treatment that causes relief. As an example, alumina can be chemically etched by immersion in boiling concentrated phosphoric acid for 30–60 s, or thermally etched in a furnace for 20–40 min at 1,500 °C (2,730 °F) in air. The plastic encapsulation must be removed before thermal etching. The alumina in Fig. 1 was thermally etched.

 
Embedded, polished ceramographic sections.

Alternatively, non-cubic ceramics can be prepared as thin sections, also known as petrography, for examination by polarized transmitted light microscopy. In this technique, the specimen is sawed to ~1 mm thick, glued to a microscope slide, and ground or sawed (e.g., by microtome) to a thickness (x) approaching 30 µm.[11][12] A cover slip is glued onto the exposed surface. The adhesives, such as epoxy or Canada balsam resin, must have approximately the same refractive index (η ≈ 1.54) as glass. Most ceramics have a very small absorption coefficient (α ≈ 0.5 cm −1 for alumina in Fig. 2) in the Beer–Lambert law below, and can be viewed in transmitted light. Cubic ceramics, e.g. yttria-stabilized zirconia and spinel, have the same refractive index in all crystallographic directions and appear, therefore, black when the microscope's polarizer is 90° out of phase with its analyzer.

  (Beer–Lambert eqn)

Ceramographic specimens are electrical insulators in most cases, and must be coated with a conductive ~10-nm layer of metal or carbon for electron microscopy, after polishing and etching. Gold or Au-Pd alloy from a sputter coater or evaporative coater also improves the reflection of visible light from the polished surface under a microscope, by the Fresnel formula below. Bare alumina (η ≈ 1.77, k ≈ 10 −6) has a negligible extinction coefficient and reflects only 8% of the incident light from the microscope, as in Fig. 1. Gold-coated (η ≈ 0.82, k ≈ 1.59 @ λ = 500 nm) alumina reflects 44% in air, 39% in immersion oil.

  (Fresnel eqn)..

Ceramographic analysis edit

Ceramic microstructures are most often analyzed by reflected visible-light microscopy in brightfield. Darkfield is used in limited circumstances, e.g., to reveal cracks. Polarized transmitted light is used with thin sections, where the contrast between grains comes from birefringence. Very fine microstructures may require the higher magnification and resolution of a scanning electron microscope (SEM) or confocal laser scanning microscope (CLSM). The cathodoluminescence microscope (CLM) is useful for distinguishing phases of refractories. The transmission electron microscope (TEM) and scanning acoustic microscope (SAM) have specialty applications in ceramography.

Ceramography is often done qualitatively, for comparison of the microstructure of a component to a standard for quality control or failure analysis purposes. Three common quantitative analyses of microstructures are grain size, second-phase content and porosity. Microstructures are measured by the principles of stereology, in which three-dimensional objects are evaluated in 2-D by projections or cross-sections. Microstructures exhibiting heterogeneous grain sizes, with certain grains growing very large, occur in diverse ceramic systems and this phenomenon is known as abnormal grain growth or AGG. The occurrence of AGG has consequences, positive or negative, on mechanical and chemical properties of ceramics and its identification is often the goal of ceramographic analysis.

Grain size can be measured by the line-fraction or area-fraction methods of ASTM E112. In the line-fraction methods, a statistical grain size is calculated from the number of grains or grain boundaries intersecting a line of known length or circle of known circumference. In the area-fraction method, the grain size is calculated from the number of grains inside a known area. In each case, the measurement is affected by secondary phases, porosity, preferred orientation, exponential distribution of sizes, and non-equiaxed grains. Image analysis can measure the shape factors of individual grains by ASTM E1382.

Second-phase content and porosity are measured the same way in a microstructure, such as ASTM E562. Procedure E562 is a point-fraction method based on the stereological principle of point fraction = volume fraction, i.e., Pp = Vv. Second-phase content in ceramics, such as carbide whiskers in an oxide matrix, is usually expressed as a mass fraction. Volume fractions can be converted to mass fractions if the density of each phase is known. Image analysis can measure porosity, pore-size distribution and volume fractions of secondary phases by ASTM E1245. Porosity measurements do not require etching. Multi-phase microstructures do not require etching if the contrast between phases is adequate, as is usually the case.

Grain size, porosity and second-phase content have all been correlated with ceramic properties such as mechanical strength σ by the Hall–Petch equation. Hardness, toughness, dielectric constant and many other properties are microstructure-dependent.

Microindentation hardness and toughness edit

 
Knoop indention (P=1kg) in 99.5% alumina
 
Toughness indention (P=10kg) in 96% alumina

The hardness of a material can be measured in many ways. The Knoop hardness test, a method of microindentation hardness, is the most reproducible for dense ceramics. The Vickers hardness test and superficial Rockwell scales (e.g., 45N) can also be used, but tend to cause more surface damage than Knoop. The Brinell test is suitable for ductile metals, but not ceramics. In the Knoop test, a diamond indenter in the shape of an elongated pyramid is forced into a polished (but not etched) surface under a predetermined load, typically 500 or 1000 g. The load is held for some amount of time, say 10 s, and the indenter is retracted. The indention long diagonal (d, μm, in Fig. 4) is measured under a microscope, and the Knoop hardness (HK) is calculated from the load (P, g) and the square of the diagonal length in the equations below. The constants account for the projected area of the indenter and unit conversion factors. Most oxide ceramics have a Knoop hardness in the range of 1000–1500 kgf/mm2 (10 – 15 GPa), and many carbides are over 2000 (20 GPa). The method is specified in ASTM C849, C1326 & E384. Microindentation hardness is also called microindentation hardness or simply microhardness. The hardness of very small particles and thin films of ceramics, on the order of 100 nm, can be measured by nanoindentation methods that use a Berkovich indenter.

  (kgf/mm2) and   (GPa)

The toughness of ceramics can be determined from a Vickers test under a load of 10 – 20 kg. Toughness is the ability of a material to resist crack propagation. Several calculations have been formulated from the load (P), elastic modulus (E), microindentation hardness (H), crack length[13] (c in Fig. 5) and flexural strength (σ).[14] Modulus of rupture (MOR) bars with a rectangular cross-section are indented in three places on a polished surface. The bars are loaded in 4-point bending with the polished, indented surface in tension, until fracture. The fracture normally originates at one of the indentions. The crack lengths are measured under a microscope. The toughness of most ceramics is 2–4 MPam, but toughened zirconia is as much as 13, and cemented carbides are often over 20.[15] The toughness-by-indention methods have been discredited recently and are being replaced by more rigorous methods that measure crack growth in a notched beam in flexure.[16]

  initial crack length
  indention strength in bending

References edit

  1. ^ R.E. Chinn, Ceramography, ASM International and the American Ceramic Society, 2002, p 1.
  2. ^ C.S. Smith, A History of Metallography, University of Chicago Press, 1960, p 169–185.
  3. ^ V.E. Lysaght, Indentation Hardness Testing, Reinhold Publishing Corp., 1949, p 17–18.
  4. ^ R.L. Smith and G.E. Sandland, “An Accurate Method of Determining the Hardness of Metals, with Particular Reference to Those of a High Degree of Hardness,” Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Vol. I, 1922, p 623–641.
  5. ^ F. Knoop, C.G. Peters and W.B. Emerson, “A Sensitive Pyramidal-Diamond Tool for Indentation Measurements,” Journal of Research of the National Bureau of Standards, V23 #1, July 1939, Research Paper RP1220, p 39–61.
  6. ^ G.L. Kehl, The Principles of Metallographic Laboratory Practice, McGraw–Hill Book Co., 1939, 1943 & 1949 (three editions).
  7. ^
  8. ^ a b D.C. Zipperian, Metallographic Handbook, PACE Technologies, 2011, p 34-43.
  9. ^ a b "Mounting of Specimens," ASM Handbook, Volume 9: Metallography and Microstructures, ASM International, 1985, ISBN 0-87170-015-8, DOI: https://doi.org/10.31399/asm.hb.v09.a0003786, p 28.
  10. ^ H. Mörtel, "Microstructural Analysis," Engineered Materials Handbook, Volume 4: Ceramics and Glasses, ASM International, 1991, p 570–579.
  11. ^ U. Täffner & R. Telle, "Experience Gained in Preparing Thin Sections of High-Performance Ceramics Using the Discoplan- TS," Structure, 24, Feb 1991, p 12–14.
  12. ^ W. Ahmed, "Petrographic Examination Methods," Tech-Notes, Buehler Ltd., Vol 3, Issue 5, 2000.
  13. ^ G.R. Anstis et al., "A Critical Evaluation of Indentation Techniques for Measuring Fracture Toughness: I, Direct Crack Measurements," J. Am. Ceram. Soc., 64 [9] p 533–538 (Sep 1981).
  14. ^ P. Chantikul et al., "A Critical Evaluation of Indentation Techniques for Measuring Fracture Toughness: II, Strength Method," J. Am. Ceram. Soc., 64 [9] p 539–543 (Sep 1981).
  15. ^ D.W. Richerson, Modern Ceramic Engineering, 2nd Ed., Marcel Dekker Inc., 1992, ISBN 0-8247-8634-3, p 741.
  16. ^ G.D. Quinn & R.C. Bradt, "On the Vickers Indentation Fracture Toughness Test," J. Am. Ceram. Soc., 90 [3] p 673–680 (Mar 2007).

Further reading and external links edit

  • Expert Guide: Materialography/Metallography, QATM Academy, ATM Qness GmbH, 2022.
  • Metallographic Preparation of Ceramic and Cermet Materials, , 2008.
  • Sample Preparation of Ceramic Material, Buehler Ltd., 1990.
  • Structure, Volume 33, , 1998, p 3–20.
  • Struers Metalog Guide
  • S. Binkowski, R. Paul & M. Woydt, "Comparing Preparation Techniques Using Microstructural Images of Ceramic Materials," Structure, Vol 39, 2002, p 8–19.
  • R.E. Chinn, Ceramography, ASM International and the American Ceramic Society, 2002, ISBN 0-87170-770-5.
  • D.J. Clinton, A Guide to Polishing and Etching of Technical and Engineering Ceramics, The Institute of Ceramics, 1987.
  • Digital Library of Ceramic Microstructures, University of Dayton, 2003.
  • G. Elssner, H. Hoven, G. Kiessler & P. Wellner, translated by R. Wert, Ceramics and Ceramic Composites: Materialographic Preparation, Elsevier Science Inc., 1999, ISBN 978-0-444-10030-6.
  • R.M. Fulrath & J.A. Pask, ed., Ceramic Microstructures: Their Analysis, Significance, and Production, Robert E. Krieger Publishing Co., 1968, ISBN 0-88275-262-6.
  • K. Geels in collaboration with D.B. Fowler, W-U Kopp & M. Rückert, Metallographic and Materialographic Specimen Preparation, Light Microscopy, Image Analysis and Hardness Testing, ASTM International, 2007, ISBN 978-0-8031-4265-7.
  • H. Insley & V.D. Fréchette, Microscopy of Ceramics and Cements, Academic Press Inc., 1955.
  • W.E. Lee and W.M. Rainforth, Ceramic Microstructures: Property Control by Processing, Chapman & Hall, 1994.
  • I.J. McColm, Ceramic Hardness, Plenum Press, 2000, ISBN 0-306-43287-0.
  • Micrograph Center, ASM International, 2005.
  • H. Mörtel, "Microstructural Analysis," Engineered Materials Handbook, Volume 4: Ceramics and Glasses, ASM International, 1991, p 570–579, ISBN 0-87170-282-7.
  • G. Petzow, Metallographic Etching, 2nd Edition, ASM International, 1999, ISBN 978-0-87170-633-1.
  • G.D. Quinn, "Indentation Hardness Testing of Ceramics," ASM Handbook, Volume 8: Mechanical Testing and Evaluation, ASM International, 2000, p 244–251, ISBN 0-87170-389-0.
  • A.T. Santhanam, "Metallography of Cemented Carbides," ASM Handbook Volume 9: Metallography and Microstructures, ASM International, 2004, p 1057–1066, ISBN 0-87170-706-3.
  • U. Täffner, V. Carle & U. Schäfer, "Preparation and Microstructural Analysis of High-Performance Ceramics," ASM Handbook Volume 9: Metallography and Microstructures, ASM International, 2004, p 1057–1066, ISBN 0-87170-706-3.
  • D.C. Zipperian, Metallographic Handbook, PACE Technologies, 2011.

ceramography, science, preparation, examination, evaluation, ceramic, microstructures, thought, metallography, ceramics, microstructure, structure, level, approximately, between, minimum, wavelength, visible, light, resolution, limit, naked, microstructure, in. Ceramography is the art and science of preparation examination and evaluation of ceramic microstructures 1 Ceramography can be thought of as the metallography of ceramics The microstructure is the structure level of approximately 0 1 to 100 µm between the minimum wavelength of visible light and the resolution limit of the naked eye The microstructure includes most grains secondary phases grain boundaries pores micro cracks and hardness microindentations Most bulk mechanical optical thermal electrical and magnetic properties are significantly affected by the microstructure The fabrication method and process conditions are generally indicated by the microstructure The root cause of many ceramic failures is evident in the microstructure Ceramography is part of the broader field of materialography which includes all the microscopic techniques of material analysis such as metallography petrography and plastography Ceramography is usually reserved for high performance ceramics for industrial applications such as 85 99 9 alumina Al2O3 in Fig 1 zirconia ZrO2 silicon carbide SiC silicon nitride Si3N4 and ceramic matrix composites It is seldom used on whiteware ceramics such as sanitaryware wall tiles and dishware Ceramographic microstructures Fig 1 Thermally etched 99 9 alumina Fig 2 Thin section of 99 9 aluminaContents 1 History 2 Preparation of ceramographic specimens 2 1 Sawing 2 2 Embedding 2 3 Grinding 2 4 Polishing 2 5 Etching 3 Ceramographic analysis 4 Microindentation hardness and toughness 5 References 6 Further reading and external linksHistory editCeramography evolved along with other branches of materialography and ceramic engineering Alois de Widmanstatten of Austria etched a meteorite in 1808 to reveal proeutectoid ferrite bands that grew on prior austenite grain boundaries Geologist Henry Clifton Sorby the father of metallography applied petrographic techniques to the steel industry in the 1860s in Sheffield England 2 French geologist Auguste Michel Levy devised a chart that correlated the optical properties of minerals to their transmitted color and thickness in the 1880s Swedish metallurgist J A Brinell invented the first quantitative hardness scale in 1900 3 Smith and Sandland developed the first microindentation hardness test at Vickers Ltd in London in 1922 4 Swiss born microscopist A I Buehler started the first metallographic equipment manufacturer near Chicago in 1936 Frederick Knoop and colleagues at the National Bureau of Standards developed a less penetrating than Vickers microindentation test in 1939 5 Struers A S of Copenhagen introduced the electrolytic polisher to metallography in 1943 George Kehl of Columbia University wrote a book that was considered the bible of materialography until the 1980s 6 Kehl co founded a group within the Atomic Energy Commission that became the International Metallographic Society 7 in 1967 Preparation of ceramographic specimens editThe preparation of ceramic specimens for microstructural analysis consists of five broad steps sawing embedding grinding polishing and etching The tools and consumables for ceramographic preparation are available worldwide from metallography equipment vendors and laboratory supply companies Sawing edit Most ceramics are extremely hard and must be wet sawed with a circular blade embedded with diamond particles A metallography or lapidary saw equipped with a low density diamond blade is usually suitable 8 citation needed The blade must be cooled by a continuous liquid spray 8 Embedding edit To facilitate further preparation the sawed specimen is usually embedded or mounted or encapsulated in a plastic disc 25 32 or 38 mm in diameter 9 citation needed A thermosetting solid resin activated by heat and compression e g mineral filled epoxy is best for most applications A castable liquid resin such as unfilled epoxy acrylic or polyester may be used for porous refractory ceramics or microelectronic devices 10 The castable resins are also available with fluorescent dyes that aid in fluorescence microscopy The left and right specimens in Fig 3 were embedded in mineral filled epoxy The center refractory in Fig 3 was embedded in castable transparent acrylic Grinding edit Grinding is abrasion of the surface of interest by abrasive particles usually diamond that are bonded to paper or a metal disc Grinding erases saw marks coarsely smooths the surface and removes stock to a desired depth A typical grinding sequence for ceramics is one minute on a 240 grit metal bonded diamond wheel rotating at 240 rpm and lubricated by flowing water followed by a similar treatment on a 400 grit wheel The specimen is washed in an ultrasonic bath after each step 9 citation needed Polishing edit Polishing is abrasion by free abrasives that are suspended in a lubricant and can roll or slide between the specimen and paper Polishing erases grinding marks and smooths the specimen to a mirror like finish Polishing on a bare metallic platen is called lapping A typical polishing sequence for ceramics is 5 10 minutes each on 15 6 and 1 µm diamond paste or slurry on napless paper rotating at 240 rpm The specimen is again washed in an ultrasonic bath after each step The three sets of specimens in Fig 3 have been sawed embedded ground and polished Etching edit Etching reveals and delineates grain boundaries and other microstructural features that are not apparent on the as polished surface The two most common types of etching in ceramography are selective chemical corrosion and a thermal treatment that causes relief As an example alumina can be chemically etched by immersion in boiling concentrated phosphoric acid for 30 60 s or thermally etched in a furnace for 20 40 min at 1 500 C 2 730 F in air The plastic encapsulation must be removed before thermal etching The alumina in Fig 1 was thermally etched nbsp Embedded polished ceramographic sections Alternatively non cubic ceramics can be prepared as thin sections also known as petrography for examination by polarized transmitted light microscopy In this technique the specimen is sawed to 1 mm thick glued to a microscope slide and ground or sawed e g by microtome to a thickness x approaching 30 µm 11 12 A cover slip is glued onto the exposed surface The adhesives such as epoxy or Canada balsam resin must have approximately the same refractive index h 1 54 as glass Most ceramics have a very small absorption coefficient a 0 5 cm 1 for alumina in Fig 2 in the Beer Lambert law below and can be viewed in transmitted light Cubic ceramics e g yttria stabilized zirconia and spinel have the same refractive index in all crystallographic directions and appear therefore black when the microscope s polarizer is 90 out of phase with its analyzer I t I 0 e a x displaystyle I t I 0 e alpha x nbsp Beer Lambert eqn Ceramographic specimens are electrical insulators in most cases and must be coated with a conductive 10 nm layer of metal or carbon for electron microscopy after polishing and etching Gold or Au Pd alloy from a sputter coater or evaporative coater also improves the reflection of visible light from the polished surface under a microscope by the Fresnel formula below Bare alumina h 1 77 k 10 6 has a negligible extinction coefficient and reflects only 8 of the incident light from the microscope as in Fig 1 Gold coated h 0 82 k 1 59 l 500 nm alumina reflects 44 in air 39 in immersion oil R I r I i h 1 h 2 2 k 2 h 1 h 2 2 k 2 displaystyle R frac I r I i frac eta 1 eta 2 2 k 2 eta 1 eta 2 2 k 2 nbsp Fresnel eqn Ceramographic analysis editCeramic microstructures are most often analyzed by reflected visible light microscopy in brightfield Darkfield is used in limited circumstances e g to reveal cracks Polarized transmitted light is used with thin sections where the contrast between grains comes from birefringence Very fine microstructures may require the higher magnification and resolution of a scanning electron microscope SEM or confocal laser scanning microscope CLSM The cathodoluminescence microscope CLM is useful for distinguishing phases of refractories The transmission electron microscope TEM and scanning acoustic microscope SAM have specialty applications in ceramography Ceramography is often done qualitatively for comparison of the microstructure of a component to a standard for quality control or failure analysis purposes Three common quantitative analyses of microstructures are grain size second phase content and porosity Microstructures are measured by the principles of stereology in which three dimensional objects are evaluated in 2 D by projections or cross sections Microstructures exhibiting heterogeneous grain sizes with certain grains growing very large occur in diverse ceramic systems and this phenomenon is known as abnormal grain growth or AGG The occurrence of AGG has consequences positive or negative on mechanical and chemical properties of ceramics and its identification is often the goal of ceramographic analysis Grain size can be measured by the line fraction or area fraction methods of ASTM E112 In the line fraction methods a statistical grain size is calculated from the number of grains or grain boundaries intersecting a line of known length or circle of known circumference In the area fraction method the grain size is calculated from the number of grains inside a known area In each case the measurement is affected by secondary phases porosity preferred orientation exponential distribution of sizes and non equiaxed grains Image analysis can measure the shape factors of individual grains by ASTM E1382 Second phase content and porosity are measured the same way in a microstructure such as ASTM E562 Procedure E562 is a point fraction method based on the stereological principle of point fraction volume fraction i e Pp Vv Second phase content in ceramics such as carbide whiskers in an oxide matrix is usually expressed as a mass fraction Volume fractions can be converted to mass fractions if the density of each phase is known Image analysis can measure porosity pore size distribution and volume fractions of secondary phases by ASTM E1245 Porosity measurements do not require etching Multi phase microstructures do not require etching if the contrast between phases is adequate as is usually the case Grain size porosity and second phase content have all been correlated with ceramic properties such as mechanical strength s by the Hall Petch equation Hardness toughness dielectric constant and many other properties are microstructure dependent Microindentation hardness and toughness edit nbsp Knoop indention P 1kg in 99 5 alumina nbsp Toughness indention P 10kg in 96 aluminaThe hardness of a material can be measured in many ways The Knoop hardness test a method of microindentation hardness is the most reproducible for dense ceramics The Vickers hardness test and superficial Rockwell scales e g 45N can also be used but tend to cause more surface damage than Knoop The Brinell test is suitable for ductile metals but not ceramics In the Knoop test a diamond indenter in the shape of an elongated pyramid is forced into a polished but not etched surface under a predetermined load typically 500 or 1000 g The load is held for some amount of time say 10 s and the indenter is retracted The indention long diagonal d mm in Fig 4 is measured under a microscope and the Knoop hardness HK is calculated from the load P g and the square of the diagonal length in the equations below The constants account for the projected area of the indenter and unit conversion factors Most oxide ceramics have a Knoop hardness in the range of 1000 1500 kgf mm2 10 15 GPa and many carbides are over 2000 20 GPa The method is specified in ASTM C849 C1326 amp E384 Microindentation hardness is also called microindentation hardness or simply microhardness The hardness of very small particles and thin films of ceramics on the order of 100 nm can be measured by nanoindentation methods that use a Berkovich indenter H K 14229 P d 2 displaystyle HK 14229 frac P d 2 nbsp kgf mm2 and H K 139 54 P d 2 displaystyle HK 139 54 frac P d 2 nbsp GPa The toughness of ceramics can be determined from a Vickers test under a load of 10 20 kg Toughness is the ability of a material to resist crack propagation Several calculations have been formulated from the load P elastic modulus E microindentation hardness H crack length 13 c in Fig 5 and flexural strength s 14 Modulus of rupture MOR bars with a rectangular cross section are indented in three places on a polished surface The bars are loaded in 4 point bending with the polished indented surface in tension until fracture The fracture normally originates at one of the indentions The crack lengths are measured under a microscope The toughness of most ceramics is 2 4 MPa m but toughened zirconia is as much as 13 and cemented carbides are often over 20 15 The toughness by indention methods have been discredited recently and are being replaced by more rigorous methods that measure crack growth in a notched beam in flexure 16 K i c l 0 016 E H P c 0 1 5 displaystyle K icl 0 016 sqrt frac E H frac P c 0 1 5 nbsp initial crack length K i s b 0 59 E H 1 8 s P 1 3 3 4 displaystyle K isb 0 59 left frac E H right 1 8 sigma P 1 3 3 4 nbsp indention strength in bendingReferences edit R E Chinn Ceramography ASM International and the American Ceramic Society 2002 p 1 C S Smith A History of Metallography University of Chicago Press 1960 p 169 185 V E Lysaght Indentation Hardness Testing Reinhold Publishing Corp 1949 p 17 18 R L Smith and G E Sandland An Accurate Method of Determining the Hardness of Metals with Particular Reference to Those of a High Degree of Hardness Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers Vol I 1922 p 623 641 F Knoop C G Peters and W B Emerson A Sensitive Pyramidal Diamond Tool for Indentation Measurements Journal of Research of the National Bureau of Standards V23 1 July 1939 Research Paper RP1220 p 39 61 G L Kehl The Principles of Metallographic Laboratory Practice McGraw Hill Book Co 1939 1943 amp 1949 three editions International Metallographic Society a b D C Zipperian Metallographic Handbook PACE Technologies 2011 p 34 43 a b Mounting of Specimens ASM Handbook Volume 9 Metallography and Microstructures ASM International 1985 ISBN 0 87170 015 8 DOI https doi org 10 31399 asm hb v09 a0003786 p 28 H Mortel Microstructural Analysis Engineered Materials Handbook Volume 4 Ceramics and Glasses ASM International 1991 p 570 579 U Taffner amp R Telle Experience Gained in Preparing Thin Sections of High Performance Ceramics Using the Discoplan TS Structure 24 Feb 1991 p 12 14 W Ahmed Petrographic Examination Methods Tech Notes Buehler Ltd Vol 3 Issue 5 2000 G R Anstis et al A Critical Evaluation of Indentation Techniques for Measuring Fracture Toughness I Direct Crack Measurements J Am Ceram Soc 64 9 p 533 538 Sep 1981 P Chantikul et al A Critical Evaluation of Indentation Techniques for Measuring Fracture Toughness II Strength Method J Am Ceram Soc 64 9 p 539 543 Sep 1981 D W Richerson Modern Ceramic Engineering 2nd Ed Marcel Dekker Inc 1992 ISBN 0 8247 8634 3 p 741 G D Quinn amp R C Bradt On the Vickers Indentation Fracture Toughness Test J Am Ceram Soc 90 3 p 673 680 Mar 2007 Further reading and external links editExpert Guide Materialography Metallography QATM Academy ATM Qness GmbH 2022 Metallographic Preparation of Ceramic and Cermet Materials Leco Met Tips No 19 2008 Sample Preparation of Ceramic Material Buehler Ltd 1990 Structure Volume 33 Struers A S 1998 p 3 20 Struers Metalog Guide S Binkowski R Paul amp M Woydt Comparing Preparation Techniques Using Microstructural Images of Ceramic Materials Structure Vol 39 2002 p 8 19 R E Chinn Ceramography ASM International and the American Ceramic Society 2002 ISBN 0 87170 770 5 D J Clinton A Guide to Polishing and Etching of Technical and Engineering Ceramics The Institute of Ceramics 1987 Digital Library of Ceramic Microstructures University of Dayton 2003 G Elssner H Hoven G Kiessler amp P Wellner translated by R Wert Ceramics and Ceramic Composites Materialographic Preparation Elsevier Science Inc 1999 ISBN 978 0 444 10030 6 R M Fulrath amp J A Pask ed Ceramic Microstructures Their Analysis Significance and Production Robert E Krieger Publishing Co 1968 ISBN 0 88275 262 6 K Geels in collaboration with D B Fowler W U Kopp amp M Ruckert Metallographic and Materialographic Specimen Preparation Light Microscopy Image Analysis and Hardness Testing ASTM International 2007 ISBN 978 0 8031 4265 7 H Insley amp V D Frechette Microscopy of Ceramics and Cements Academic Press Inc 1955 W E Lee and W M Rainforth Ceramic Microstructures Property Control by Processing Chapman amp Hall 1994 I J McColm Ceramic Hardness Plenum Press 2000 ISBN 0 306 43287 0 Micrograph Center ASM International 2005 H Mortel Microstructural Analysis Engineered Materials Handbook Volume 4 Ceramics and Glasses ASM International 1991 p 570 579 ISBN 0 87170 282 7 G Petzow Metallographic Etching 2nd Edition ASM International 1999 ISBN 978 0 87170 633 1 G D Quinn Indentation Hardness Testing of Ceramics ASM Handbook Volume 8 Mechanical Testing and Evaluation ASM International 2000 p 244 251 ISBN 0 87170 389 0 A T Santhanam Metallography of Cemented Carbides ASM Handbook Volume 9 Metallography and Microstructures ASM International 2004 p 1057 1066 ISBN 0 87170 706 3 U Taffner V Carle amp U Schafer Preparation and Microstructural Analysis of High Performance Ceramics ASM Handbook Volume 9 Metallography and Microstructures ASM International 2004 p 1057 1066 ISBN 0 87170 706 3 D C Zipperian Metallographic Handbook PACE Technologies 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ceramography amp oldid 1143808238, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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