Adrian Goldstein

Transparent Ceramics


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SiO2, sodium oxide Na2O, potassium oxide K2O, and alumina Al2O3. Obviously, the manufacturing processes are fundamentally different.

      A glass is formed by fast cooling of melts; it is a mono-phased solid, based on a disordered lattice, which is isotropic at the optical wavelength scale. It can be produced as large blocks devoid of any internal interfaces on the microlevel. When well processed, “large” (over several millimeters sized) pieces lack any regions that might produce light scattering; non-optimally processed glasses may still contain air bubbles causing light scattering. The absorption bandgap of usual silicate glasses is in the UV, and absorption by transition element cations is very low. Consequently, conditions are well met for allowing VIS light transmission. A silicate-based glass window can be highly transparent.

      In contrast to glass, earthen ware like a pot, the earliest ceramic form, are polycrystalline, including phases like quartz and aluminosilicates. Most crystallites making up these bodies are optically anisotropic, exhibiting different refractive indices at different light propagation orientations and/or polarizations, and they are randomly oriented. Moreover, large amounts of variable size pores are present. Such samples are thus opaque to VIS light (see Section 2.1).

Photo depicts the evolution of transparency during ceramic history (a) Clay pitcher opaque. (b) Bone China saucer, translucent.

      Source: Reproduced with permission from Hecht Museum, Haifa University, Israel.

      (b) Bone China saucer, translucent.

      In the late 1950s, the first real transparent ceramic objects, exhibiting a fair level of light transmission, comprising only polycrystalline phases, was developed [B66]. A brief presentation of that development is the subject of the next section.

      1.5.2 The First Fully Crystalline Transparent Ceramic

      The advent of the Lucalox, and then its commercial success, immediately triggered great interest in transparent ceramics. New materials and processing approaches, along with considerable basic knowledge, resulted in efforts to develop new transparent ceramics.

Schematic illustration of the first translucent. All-crystalline ceramic includes imaging and microstructure (a) White opaque regular alumina ceramic (left) translucent Lucalox ceramic alumina (right) and (b) microstructure of the translucent part.