Big Chemical Encyclopedia

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

Articles Figures Tables About

Knoop boron nitrides

Diamond. Diamond [7782 0-3] is the hardest substance known (see Carbon, diamond, natural). It has a Knoop hardness of 78—80 kN/m (8000—8200 kgf/m ). The next hardest substance is cubic boron nitride with a Knoop value of 46 kN/m, and its inventor, Wentorf, beheves that no manufactured material will ever exceed diamond s hardness (17). In 1987 the world production of natural industrial diamonds (4) was about 110 t (1 g = 5 carats). It should be noted that whereas the United States was the leading consumer of industrial diamonds in 1987 (140 t) only 260 kg of natural industrial diamonds were consumed this is the lowest figure in 48 years (4), illustrating the impact that synthetic diamonds have made on the natural diamond abrasive market. [Pg.10]

Silicon carbide is noted for its extreme hardness [182-184], its high abrasive power, high modulus of elasticity (450 GPa), high temperature resistance up to above 1500°C, as well as high resistance to abrasion. The industrial importance of silicon carbide is mainly due to its extreme hardness of 9.5-9.75 on the Mohs scale. Only diamond, cubic boron nitride, and boron carbide are harder. The Knoop microhardness number HK-0.1, that is the hardness measured with a load of 0.1 kp (w0.98N), is 2600 (2000 for aAl203, 3000 for B4C, 4700 for cubic BN, and 7000-8000 for diamond). Silicon carbide is very brittle, and can therefore be crushed comparatively easily in spite of its great hardness. Table 8 summarizes some typical physical properties of the SiC ceramics. [Pg.720]

Fig. 4-26. Temperature dependency of the microhardness (Knoop) of sintered and composite dense polycrystalline boron nitride materials from 300 to 1500 K (in GPa) [2]. Fig. 4-26. Temperature dependency of the microhardness (Knoop) of sintered and composite dense polycrystalline boron nitride materials from 300 to 1500 K (in GPa) [2].

See other pages where Knoop boron nitrides is mentioned: [Pg.219]    [Pg.219]    [Pg.1065]    [Pg.184]    [Pg.28]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.440 ]




SEARCH



Boron nitride Knoop hardness

© 2024 chempedia.info