Ceramic and Glass Materials: Structure, Properties and Processing

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James F. Shackelford, Robert H. Doremus
Springer Science & Business Media, Apr 12, 2008 - Technology & Engineering - 202 pages

Ceramic and Glass Materials: Structure, Properties and Processing is a concise and comprehensive guide to the key ceramic and glass materials used in modern technology. Each chapter focuses on the structure-property relationships for these important materials and expands the reader’s understanding of their nature by simultaneously discussing the technology of their processing methods. In each case, the resulting understanding of the contemporary applications of the materials provides insights as to their future roles in twenty first century engineering and technology.

Organized to be a practical and comprehensive resource, each chapter is dedicated to a specific material such as: alumina, mullite, sillimanite minerals, aluminates, quartz and silicas, refractory oxides, clays, concrete and cement, lead compounds, and zirconia.

Written by international authors in materials science and engineering, Ceramic and Glass Materials: Structure, Properties and Processing is an invaluable reference for advanced undergraduates, graduate students, and working professionals in a wide range of scientific fields.

 

Contents

Mullite
27
Andalusite
40
Quartz and Silicas
71
Refractory Oxides
87
Clays
111
Concrete and Cement
135
Lead Compounds
151
Zirconia 169
168
Index
199
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Page xi - Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science University of California Davis, CA Akihisa Inoue Institute for Materials Research Tohoku University Sendai, Japan Carl C. Koch Materials Science and Engineering Department North Carolina State University Raleigh, NC Lynn K.

About the author (2008)

James F. Shackelford has BS and MS degrees in Ceramic Engineering from the University of Washington and a Ph.D. in Materials Science and Engineering from the University of California, Berkeley. He is currently a Professor in the Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science at the University of California, Davis. For many years, he served as the Associate Dean for Undergraduate Studies in the College of Engineering and currently serves as the Director of the Integrated Studies Honors Program, an invitational, residential program for first-year students from a wide spectrum of majors. He also serves as an Associate Director for Education for the National Science Foundation-funded Center for Biophotonics Science and Technology (CBST). He teaches and conducts research in the areas of materials science, the structure of materials, nondestructive testing, and biomaterials. A member of the American Ceramic Society and ASM International, he was named Fellow of the American Ceramic Society in 1992 and received the Outstanding Educator Award from the Academic Senate of the University of California, Davis. He has published over 100 archived papers and books including Introduction to Materials Science for Engineers now in its 6th Edition and the CRC Materials Science and Engineering Handbook now in its 3rd Edition. TheIntroduction to Materials Science for Engineers has now been translated into Chinese, Korean, and Spanish.