A ceramic material is an inorganic non metallic often crystalline oxide nitride or carbide material.
Definition of ceramics in engineering.
Engineering ceramics such as silicon nitride silicon carbide and a large number of oxides are used in industries ranging from aerospace to automotive and biomedical to electronics.
Ceramics are typically hard and chemically non reactive and can be formed or densified with heat.
Materials science and engineering.
Examples of their applications are the space shuttle tiles car parts and computer parts.
These materials are used because they possess a range of properties that are attractive for particular applications.
The term includes the purification of raw materials the study and production of the chemical.
They withstand chemical erosion that occurs in other materials subjected to acidic or caustic environments.
A ceramic is a material that is neither metallic nor organic.
Ceramic engineering is the science and technology of creating objects from inorganic non metallic materials.
Some elements such as carbon or silicon may be considered ceramics ceramic materials are brittle hard strong in compression and weak in shearing and tension.
This is done either by the action of heat or at lower temperatures using precipitation reactions from high purity chemical solutions.