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Crystal polycrystalline boron nitride

A wide range of cutting-tool materials is available. Properties, performance capabilities, and cost vary widely (2,7). Various steels (see Steel) cast cobalt alloys (see Cobalt and cobalt alloys) cemented, cast, and coated carbides (qv) ceramics (qv), sintered polycrystalline cubic boron nitride (cBN) (see Boron compounds) and sintered polycrystalline diamond tbin diamond coatings on cemented carbides and ceramics and single-crystal natural diamond (see Carbon) are all used as tool materials. Most tool materials used in the 1990s were developed during the twentieth century. The tool materials of the 1990s... [Pg.194]

Cubic Phase of Boron Nitride c-BN. The cubic phase of boron nitride (c-BN) is one of the hardest materials, second only to diamond and with similar crystal structure. It is the first example of a new material theoretically predicted and then synthesized in laboratory. From automated synthesis a microcrystalline phase of cubic boron nitride is recovered at ambient conditions in a metastable state, providing the basic material for a wide range of cutting and grinding applications. Synthetic polycrystalline diamonds and nitrides are principally used as abrasives but in spite of the greater hardness of diamond, its employment as a superabrasive is limited by a relatively low chemical and thermal stability. Cubic boron nitride, on the contrary, has only half the hardness of diamond but an extremely high thermal stability and inertness. [Pg.215]

Polycrystalline cubic boron nitride is preferable over single crystal cBN because it can be manufactured in bigger sizes and has higher fracture toughness. However, like its counterpart pcD, it can only be sintered at very high pressures and temperatures with the aid of binders because of its strong covalent bonds. [Pg.518]

This includes single crystal silicon [15], germanium [22] and alumina [10] fibers. Polycrystalline fibers can grow either by a VLS or a VS phase transformation when the incident laser power (focal temperature) is intermediate, and supports the growth of a fiber with a semisolid tip. This includes polycrystalline silicon [15], boron [5] and silicon carbide fibers [23]. Amorphous fibers are obtained by a VS phase transformation when the incident laser (focal temperature) is low, and supports the growth of a fiber with a hot but solid tip. This includes amorphous silicon [15], boron [12], carbon [13] [16], silicon carbide [23], and silicon nitride [17] fibers. [Pg.64]


See other pages where Crystal polycrystalline boron nitride is mentioned: [Pg.567]    [Pg.318]    [Pg.409]    [Pg.1035]    [Pg.19]    [Pg.718]    [Pg.28]    [Pg.94]    [Pg.574]    [Pg.339]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.520 ]




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Boron crystallization

Boron polycrystalline

Polycrystalline

Polycrystalline boron nitride

Polycrystallines

Polycrystallinity

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