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2009 | Buch

Sapphire

Material, Manufacturing, Applications

verfasst von: Valerian Pishchik, Leonid A. Lytvynov, Elena R. Dobrovinskaya

Verlag: Springer US

Buchreihe : Micro- and Opto-Electronic Materials, Structures, and Systems

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Über dieses Buch

By the second half of the twentieth century, a new branch of materials science had come into being — crystalline materials research. Its appearance is linked to the emergence of advanced technologies primarily based on single crystals (bulk crystals and films). At the turn of the last century, the impending onset of the “ceramic era” was forecasted. It was believed that ceramics would play a role comparable to that of the Stone or Bronze Ages in the history of civilization. Naturally, such an assumption was hypothetical, but it showed that ceramic materials had evoked keen interest among researchers. Although sapphire traditionally has been considered a gem, it has developed into a material typical of the “ceramic era.” Widening the field of sapphire application necessitated essential improvement of its homogeneity and working characteristics and extension of the range of sapphire products, especially those with stipulated properties including a preset structural defect distribution. In the early 1980s, successful attainment of crystals with predetermined char- teristics was attributed to proper choice of the growth method. At present, in view of the fact that the requirements for crystalline products have become more str- gent, such an approach tends to be insufficient. It is clear that one must take into account the physical–chemical processes that take place during the formation of the real crystal structure, i.e., the growth mechanisms and the nature and causes of crystal imperfections.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
1. Application of Sapphire
Abstract
As far back as the tenth century BC , sapphires and rubies were valued as gems on the level of diamonds. Artificial sapphires were first used in jewelry art as well, but from the beginning of the twentieth century sapphire has played an increasingly significant role in engineering. At present one can hardly find a branch of science or technology where this crystal is not used. Demand for sapphire grows year after year, almost exponentially.
Devices and their components applied in aviation and space industries, in chemical processing, and in many other fields are simultaneously subjected to the action of aggressive media, radiation, high temperatures, pressures, and mechanical loads. Under such extreme conditions any material is prone to intense corrosion and erosion. High-strength alloys have reached the practical limits of their capabilities. The structure of polycrystalline materials and consequently their mechanical properties essentially change under extreme conditions due to recrystallization, corrosion of the grain boundaries, and so forth The rate of diffusion via the grain boundaries grow with increasing temperature, radiation dose, and operation time. As a result, the material breaks down. Such drawbacks are inherent in sapphire components and assemblies to a considerably lesser extent.
Elena R. Dobrovinskaya, Leonid A. Lytvynov, Valerian Pishchik
2. Properties of Sapphire
Abstract
  • Mirror-turn axis of the sixth order (ternary inversion axis)
  • Three axes of the second order normal to it
  • Three symmetry planes normal to the axes of the second order and intercrossing along the axis of the highest order
  • Symmetry center
Elena R. Dobrovinskaya, Leonid A. Lytvynov, Valerian Pishchik
3. Radiation Effects in Sapphire
Abstract
High-energy particles that participate in elastic and inelastic interactions with target nuclei cause shifts of the crystal lattice atoms. At low energies of bombarding particles, such shifts lead to the formation of individual vacancies and individual interstitial atoms
Elena R. Dobrovinskaya, Leonid A. Lytvynov, Valerian Pishchik
4. Crystal Growth Methods
Abstract
Sapphire can be grown from the gaseous, liquid, and solid phases. An ample literature devoted to the methods of obtaining sapphire from different media contains data on the theory and practice of growing the crystal. Our task is to arm the readers with the logic to choose the most suitable method. This logic is based on the physical–chemical essence of the growth processes and on the peculiarities of a particular method
Elena R. Dobrovinskaya, Leonid A. Lytvynov, Valerian Pishchik
5. The Regularities of Structure Defect Formation at the Crystal Growing
Abstract
This chapter will present the main mechanisms of the structure defect formation in sapphire and will look at the possibilities of growing the crystals with a prespecified distribution of the structure defects
Elena R. Dobrovinskaya, Leonid A. Lytvynov, Valerian Pishchik
6. Influence of Chemical–Mechanical Treatment on the Quality of Sapphire Article Working Surfaces and on the Evolution of Surfaces under the Action of Forces
Abstract
Development of a technology for reproducible crystal treatment is a complicated problem. On the one hand, even crystals grown by the same method under identical conditions may differ in quality and properties, and consequently in the requirements of treatment (to say nothing of the crystals obtained by different methods)
Elena R. Dobrovinskaya, Leonid A. Lytvynov, Valerian Pishchik
7. The Effect of Thermal Treatment of Crystals on Their Structure Quality and Mechanical Characteristics
Abstract
The modern technological processes of manufacturing single-crystal articles usually include thermal treatment of the already-made products or their blanks as one of the necessary stages. Thermal treatment presumes exposure of crystals at certain temperature for the specified time, those being sufficient for the course of relaxation processes at a necessary velocity.
Elena R. Dobrovinskaya, Leonid A. Lytvynov, Valerian Pishchik
8. Methods for Obtaining Complex Monolithic Sapphire Units and Large-Size Crystals
Abstract
The present-day state of crystal growth technologies makes it possible to obtain sapphire products of rather large size and complex configuration. However, demand has arisen for super-large sapphire crystals and complex single-piece units, which cannot be grown in practice but must be assembled from separate components. In addition, sapphire-metallic and sapphire-ceramic joints are demanded, the main requirements for which include vacuum, electrical, and mechanical strength, high transparency, wear resistance, chemical stability, and so forth.
Naturally, the opportunity to increase the size of grown crystals is limited. In the next few years, there clearly will be a rise of some 10–15%. However, the growth of these crystals may turn out to be economically inexpedient. So, a search has begun for new technologies yielding large-size crystals and units based on the fabrication of single-piece joints.
Elena R. Dobrovinskaya, Leonid A. Lytvynov, Valerian Pishchik
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
Sapphire
verfasst von
Valerian Pishchik
Leonid A. Lytvynov
Elena R. Dobrovinskaya
Copyright-Jahr
2009
Verlag
Springer US
Electronic ISBN
978-0-387-85695-7
Print ISBN
978-0-387-85694-0
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-85695-7

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