tsapa
Industrial
- Aug 1, 2003
- 6
Greetings,
I've heard through numerous ceramic manufacturers that annealing "technical ceramics" such as >99% alumina, sintered silcon carbide, etc., is sometimes worth the extra step, sometimes not. It makes sense to anneal the finished part after it has undergone extensive post-firing grinding to relieve stresses, but is this actually true and is it common practice? Does anyone have experience in doing so, and if yes - would it be for stress relief of other reason(s)? The parts we would be annealing would be for use in valves and pumps.
Thanks!
Tsapa
I've heard through numerous ceramic manufacturers that annealing "technical ceramics" such as >99% alumina, sintered silcon carbide, etc., is sometimes worth the extra step, sometimes not. It makes sense to anneal the finished part after it has undergone extensive post-firing grinding to relieve stresses, but is this actually true and is it common practice? Does anyone have experience in doing so, and if yes - would it be for stress relief of other reason(s)? The parts we would be annealing would be for use in valves and pumps.
Thanks!
Tsapa