81 |
Electron microscope investigation of SiC-whisker reinforced-oxide ceramic compositesRavichandran, M. V. January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
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82 |
The effects of temperature on hardness and wear processes in engineering ceramicsNaylor, M. G. S. January 1982 (has links)
No description available.
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83 |
Synthesis of nitrogen ceramic powders by carbothermal reduction and nitridationCho, Young Whan January 1990 (has links)
No description available.
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84 |
Structural investigations of phosphate and aluminofluorophosphate glasses with and without nitridation.Fletcher, Joseph Patrick, III. January 1989 (has links)
Knowledge of the structural arrangement of the atoms in a solid is an important prerequisite to a detailed understanding of physical and chemical properties. In this work, structural investigations of phosphate (Ca-P-O) and aluminofluorophosphate (Na/Ba-Al-P-O-F) glasses with and without nitridation were performed. Nitrogen was introduced via metal nitrides (AlN, Ba₃N₂, or Ca₃N₂) or ammonia gas treatment of the melt. These glasses were characterized by chemical, thermal and optical techniques. Infrared, Raman, and MASS NMR spectroscopies were used to determine the local coordination and atomic structure of these glasses. The presence of peaks corresponding to P-O-P and PO₂ molecular vibrations in Ca-P-O glasses provided a basis for proposing a calcium metaphosphate glass structure comprised of long chains. As calcium oxide is added to calcium metaphosphate glasses, the long chains are broken up into shorter pyrophosphate units, as indicated by the presence of PO₃²⁻ terminal groups. MASS NMR of Ba-Al-P-O glasses showed that Al occurs as Al(4), Al(6), and either Al(5) or Al(6) linked through Al-O-Al bonds (such as in α-Al₂O₃). The addition of F in both the Ba-Al-P-O-F and Na-Al-P-O-F systems increases the relative abundance of Al(6). The ³¹P peak maxima in the MASS NMR spectra at about -5 to -10 ppm for Ba-Al-P-O-F-N glasses and -9 to -17 for Na-Al-P-O-F-N glass, indicate that pyrophosphate units dominate the structure of these glassy solids. Raman spectroscopy of a series of Al(PO₃)₃-NaF glasses showed that an increase in NaF content causes a shortening of the P-O-P chains and a more disrupted structural network. The presence of P-O-F units were observed only at the higher (>80 mole %) NaF contents. While the complexity of the Raman spectra make it difficult to confirm the presence of P-N bonding, glasses prepared in an ammonia atmosphere (nitrogen content of 1.6 wt%) suggest the possibility of P-N bonding on the basis of a vibrational peak at 826 cm⁻¹.
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85 |
Hybrid polyorganosiloxane - silicate materialsSoubhi, S. January 1982 (has links)
No description available.
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86 |
Sol-gel routes into high Tâ†c ceramic superconductorsTweed, Jonathan Daryl January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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87 |
The effect of Batch Redox number on glass meltingHulme, R. January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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88 |
Cracking of laminated glass initiated by low velocity impactsCoward, David Paul January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
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89 |
Studies of glass structure by neutron scatteringHulme, Robert Alexander January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
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90 |
Routes to improving inter-grain contact in high temperature superconductorsBoardman, C. J. January 1994 (has links)
No description available.
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