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Ceramic Materials

Missouri University of Science and Technology

1975

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Engineering

Subsolidus Equilibria And Metastable Phase Development In The System Zro₂-Al₂O₃-Sio₂, Charles Christopher Sorrell Jan 1975

Subsolidus Equilibria And Metastable Phase Development In The System Zro₂-Al₂O₃-Sio₂, Charles Christopher Sorrell

Bachelors Theses

"Subsolidus equilibria in the low silica portion of the system ZrO₂-Al₂O₃-SiO₂ were studied by X-ray diffraction of quenched samples fired at 1300°, 1400°, and 1480°C. Samples prepared as powders from combinations of a-Al₂O₃, Al(OH)₃, silicic acid, ZrO₂, and kaolinite reacted very slowly at 1300° and 1400°C and the trends toward equilibria are not apparent. A mixture of zircon and Al(OH)₃ reacted slowly at 1480°C to form mullite and ZrO₂, indicating that the latter phases are the stable assemblage rather than zircon and alumina. A gel prepared from aluminum nitrate, zirconyl nitrate, and colloidal silica reacted at 1480°C to form alumina, …


Crystallization Of A Tetrasilicic Fluormica Glass, W. H. Daniels, Robert E. Moore Jan 1975

Crystallization Of A Tetrasilicic Fluormica Glass, W. H. Daniels, Robert E. Moore

Materials Science and Engineering Faculty Research & Creative Works

The crystallization of a tetrasilicic synthetic mica glass of nominal composition K2Mg5Si8O20F4 was investigated at selected temperatures from 560° to 1150°C using DTA, density measurements, electron microscopy, and X‐ray diffraction techniques. Crystallization is shown to occur in 2 stages. (1) Initial structural ordering occurs at ∼600°C, as indicated by a strongly exothermic reaction, an increase in density, and the appearance of X‐ray diffraction lines. (This transformation temperature is related to fluorine content.) (2) The crystal morphology of the glass‐ceramic changes at 900° to 1150°C. A mechanism is proposed for the transformation from amorphous to crystalline structure in this synthetic mica …


Characterization Of Two Mexican Raw Dolomites For Refractory Brick Production, Rodolfo Trevino Cantu Jan 1975

Characterization Of Two Mexican Raw Dolomites For Refractory Brick Production, Rodolfo Trevino Cantu

Masters Theses

"Two Mexican dolomites were characterized in order to discover their suitability for production of refractory brick.

The results were compared with other dolomites from American Companies. Some samples were burned in a gas fired Laboratory Furnace and others were obtained in the burned state after processing in Industrial Rotary Kilns.

The characterization procedures included X-Ray Diffraction, Scanning Auger Microprobe, DTA and TGA techniques, Chemical Analysis and Bulk Density measurements.

The procedure to control the quality of the dead-burned dolomite at the industrial level was established taking as the main criteria, bulk density, hydration susceptibility, and impurity levels"--Abstract, page ii.