Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Ceramic oxides spinel-type structure

A majority of the important oxide ceramics fall into a few particular structure types. One omission from this review is the structure of silicates, which can be found in many ceramics [1, 26] or mineralogy [19, 20] texts. Silicate structures are composed of silicon-oxygen tetrahedral that form a variety of chain and network type structures depending on whether the tetrahedra share comers, edges, or faces. For most nonsilicate ceramics, the crystal structures are variations of either the face-centered cubic (FCC) lattice or a hexagonal close-packed (HCP) lattice with different cation and anion occupancies of the available sites [25]. Common structure names, examples of compounds with those structures, site occupancies, and coordination numbers are summarized in Tables 9 and 10 for FCC and HCP-based structures [13,25], The FCC-based structures are rock salt, fluorite, anti-fluorite, perovskite, and spinel. The HCP-based structures are wurtzite, rutile, and corundum. [Pg.97]


See other pages where Ceramic oxides spinel-type structure is mentioned: [Pg.120]    [Pg.575]    [Pg.144]    [Pg.487]    [Pg.171]    [Pg.194]    [Pg.24]    [Pg.316]    [Pg.13]    [Pg.1307]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.6]    [Pg.119]    [Pg.113]    [Pg.55]    [Pg.147]    [Pg.77]    [Pg.88]    [Pg.1161]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.575 ]




SEARCH



Ceramics types

Oxidant Type

Oxidation ceramics

Oxides structure types

Oxides types

Oxides, structure

Spinel oxide

Spinel type structure

Spinel-type oxides

Spinels

© 2024 chempedia.info