Vitrification is the progressive partial fusion of a clay or of a body as a result of a firing process.
Vitrification process in ceramics.
The ultimate purpose of firing is to achieve some measure of bonding of the particles for strength and consolidation or reduction in porosity e g for impermeability to fluids in silicate based ceramics bonding and consolidation are accomplished by partial vitrification vitrification is the formation of glass accomplished in this case through the melting of crystalline.
Glass in this context is a more or less contiguous amorphous solid region in the ceramic.
Vitrification is the solidification of a melt into a glass rather than a crystalline structure crystallization.
Glass clay bodies and glazes vitrify but in ceramics use of the term focuses most on clay bodies.
Vitrification is a process that converts liquid and chemical waste into solid glass form.
A glass formed in the process of vitrification even in tiny amounts is what holds ceramic materials together.
As vitrification proceeds the proportion of glassy bond increases and the apparent porosity of the fired product becomes progressively lower.
Recently pnnl glass scientists conducted the first test of vitrification of actual waste.
Vitrification is a process.
You can visualize the ceramic as being initially composed of many small grains that tightly pressed together.
Vitrification is literally turning into glass.
A ceramic fault caused by an excessive quantity of glass phase produced.
The vitrification and crystallization techniques yield dense glasses and glass ceramics respectively.
Vitrification from vitreum latin for glass is the most important and perhaps the most poorly understood process in ceramics.
Vitrification is the progressive partial fusion of a clay or of a body as a result of a firing process.
Vitreous bodies have open porosity and may be either opaque or translucent.
It is based on a liquid fed ceramic melter in which the high level fission product solution is fed directly together or separately with the glass forms into the glass melter where the process steps of evapora tion calcination and melting occur simultaneously.
Vitreous bodies have open porosity and may be either opaque or translucent.
Pnnl researchers demonstrated vitrification of three gallons of tank waste which was an important first step toward treating all of that plutonium waste.
Vitrification from vitreum latin for glass is the most important and perhaps the most poorly understood process in ceramics.
As vitrification proceeds the proportion of glassy bond increases and the apparent porosity of the fired product becomes progressively lower.
A glass formed in the process of vitrification even in tiny amounts is what holds ceramic materials together.
The pamela process the pamela vitrification plant is a single step process.
9 3 1 vitrification and crystallization technique.