Issue |
J. Phys. Colloques
Volume 46, Number C4, Avril 1985
International Conference on the Structure and Properties of Internal Interfaces
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Page(s) | C4-51 - C4-59 | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/jphyscol:1985404 |
J. Phys. Colloques 46 (1985) C4-51-C4-59
DOI: 10.1051/jphyscol:1985404
GRAIN BOUNDARIES IN POLYPHASE CERAMICS
D.R. ClarkeThomas J. Watson Research Center, IBM, Yorktown Heights, NY 10598, U.S.A.
Abstract
The majority of polyphase ceramics contain a residual glass phase at their grain boundaries. The stability of these phases, particularly at the two-grain boundaries, is of significance since they affect the properties of the material as a whole. Drawing analogies with soap films, the stability of a continuous intergranular phase is considered in terms of the balance between the capillarity and disjoining pressures. The individual components to the disjoining pressures are discussed. It is argued that a large structural component to the disjoining pressure is responsible for the observed constancy of the thickness of its intergranular phase in polyphase silicon nitride ceramics. Mechanisms for the de-wetting of a grain boundary containing an intergranular glass phase are also discussed.