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1 s in selected matrices (polymers, metals and ceramics).
2 ns on the deformation behaviour of superhard ceramics.
3 tile TiO2 single crystal and polycrystalline ceramics.
4 h's crust and are ingredients in traditional ceramics.
5 relative to the conventional polycrystalline ceramics.
6 near I-V behavior of (Nb + In) co-doped TiO2 ceramics.
7 as well as increased crystallite size in the ceramics.
8 plasticity is well known for many alloys and ceramics.
9 density, stiff, and damage-tolerant cellular ceramics.
10 ass crystallisation and development of glass-ceramics.
11 nt classes of conducting and superconducting ceramics.
12 der of magnitude as the expansion of typical ceramics.
13 e so manufactured metal containing non-oxide ceramics.
14 D surface features, in polymers, metals, and ceramics.
15 te replacements for lead-based piezoelectric ceramics.
16 e, polymeric precursor to nonoxide, Si-based ceramics.
17 cture modes and fatigue lifespans of layered ceramics.
18  loading, accelerates the fatigue of layered ceramics.
19 etals, oxides, polymers, semiconductors, and ceramics.
20  for the fabrication of high-quality alumina ceramics.
21 ineering required for the next generation of ceramics.
22 nsive residential architecture and a lack of ceramics.
23 ubes (SWNTs) as toughening agents in brittle ceramics.
24 ery-high-alumina glasses and nanoscale glass-ceramics.
25 potential use in reinforcing nanocrystalline ceramics.
26 oice for cutting and shaping hard metals and ceramics.
27  a tensile strength approaching that of hard ceramics.
28 ch strategy, including polymers, metals, and ceramics.
29 referred manufacturing method for industrial ceramics.
30  an important milestone for modern technical ceramics.
31 ting materials discovery to develop improved ceramics.
32 cal durability of fluorocanasite-based glass-ceramics.
33 ructure in the mechanical response of dental ceramics.
34 o form continuous thin films of single-phase ceramics.
35 tuning mechanical properties of high-entropy ceramics.
36  further leads to distinct properties of the ceramics.
37 operties and designing tailored high-entropy ceramics.
38 d design/computer-aided manufacturing dental ceramics.
39  far beyond the average value of traditional ceramics.
40  polymer framework with ionically conductive ceramics.
41 s challenging as metals do not typically wet ceramics.
42 terials, ranging from soft polymers to rigid ceramics.
43 d materials, such as high-entropy alloys and ceramics.
44 n making superhard materials and engineering ceramics.
45 ss 2-3 times the strength of traditional hBN ceramics.
46 K(-1)) and exceeding that of many metals and ceramics.
47 toughness, strength and slow crack growth in ceramics.
48 rovement of the permittivity of BaTiO3-based ceramics.
49  shielding and ductility in high-performance ceramics.
50 ign of high performance microwave dielectric ceramics.
51     The extremely high melting point of many ceramics adds challenges to additive manufacturing as co
52 enters in water are evaluated in four dental ceramics: "aesthetic" ceramics-porcelain and micaceous g
53 indirect restorations with reinforced dental ceramics, all made possible by the rapid improvements in
54  have shown that for polycrystalline alumina ceramics, an average grain size <1 microm coupled with a
55 nthetic strategies for modified SiC and SiCN ceramics, an overview of the morphologies, structures an
56 lass-ceramics and zirconia; the medium glass-ceramics and alumina exhibit intermediate responses.
57 ket lack the aesthetics of competitive glass-ceramics and are therefore somewhat restricted in the an
58 s all other reported binary and high-entropy ceramics and can be used for super-hard coatings, struct
59 is paper describes a sintering technique for ceramics and ceramic-based composites, using water as a
60 and a brief synopsis on new machinable glass-ceramics and ceramic-based interpenetrating phase compos
61 multaneously that have not been reported for ceramics and ceramics-matrix-composite structures, such
62                                      Several ceramics and composite systems have been successfully de
63 c semiconductors, metals and dielectrics, to ceramics and even 2D materials (e.g., graphene, MoS(2) )
64  materials found in shipped cargoes, such as ceramics and fertilizers, or radionuclides in recently t
65 y of materials such as metals, glass, glazed ceramics and flexible polymer substrates.
66 orating various insoluble species, including ceramics and geological specimens in powder form, into a
67             For mixtures of liquids, alloys, ceramics and glasses the serpentine trajectories could c
68 o other brittle materials systems (including ceramics and glasses).
69  give an overview of a selection of emerging ceramics and issues for dental or biomedical application
70 bend testing per ASTM C 1161-94 for advanced ceramics and Izod impact testing according to a modified
71 ationships that lie between those of brittle ceramics and marginally tough metals.
72                                    Polymers, ceramics and metals have historically dominated the appl
73 tals, metamaterials and templates for porous ceramics and metals.
74  on extraction of lipids from archaeological ceramics and needs to be considered to maximize the yiel
75  useful in helping to strengthen and toughen ceramics and other nanocomposites at high temperatures.
76 rials in this valve injector are composed of ceramics and PEEK (polyetheretherketone).
77  have been achieved in traditional thin-film ceramics and polymer ferroelectrics, they require the ap
78  have been achieved in traditional thin-film ceramics and polymer ferroelectrics, they require the ap
79                        Relaxor ferroelectric ceramics and polymers are promising candidates as EC mat
80              Composed of electrocaloric (EC) ceramics and polymers, polymer composites with high EC p
81 tle responses are observed in the fine glass-ceramics and porcelain; conversely, the most quasi-plast
82 s, and have been observed in metals, alloys, ceramics and proteins.
83                                   Mesoporous ceramics and semiconductors enable low-cost solar power,
84 ngle-crystal growth to a range of functional ceramics and semiconductors.
85 calibrated throughout) along with the use of ceramics and the adoption of sedentism(1).
86 cent years to identifying radiation-tolerant ceramics and the characteristics that promote radiation
87 ich agree well with experimental results for ceramics and thin films.
88 are critical for clinical success of brittle ceramics and treatment options that rely on adhesive bon
89 phenomenon increases the damage tolerance of ceramics and will allow engineers to design reliable cer
90 origin of the mechanical properties in these ceramics and will enable precise tailoring in the future
91 c responses are observed in the coarse glass-ceramics and zirconia; the medium glass-ceramics and alu
92 lenges associated with full-contour zirconia ceramics, and a brief synopsis on new machinable glass-c
93                   Digital manufacturing, all-ceramics, and adhesive dentistry are currently the trend
94 es, as precursors to nanostructured magnetic ceramics, and as etch resists to plasmas and other radia
95 rforming the current ferroelectric polymers, ceramics, and composites.
96 clinical performance has engaged the dental, ceramics, and engineering communities alike.
97  high-temperature stability over traditional ceramics, and high entropy nitrides and carbonitrides (H
98 t that is ten times larger than conventional ceramics, and may revolutionize these applications.
99                           Glass, crystalline ceramics, and metals are discussed separately, and the n
100  nanostructures from metals, semiconductors, ceramics, and nanocarbons.
101 curing, dental adhesives and dental cements, ceramics, and new functional repair materials.
102 nisms are typically made of metals, silicon, ceramics, and plastics.
103 nclude examples from metals, semiconductors, ceramics, and polymers, Ni, Si, HfO2, and PMMA, respecti
104 iety of powdered materials including metals, ceramics, and polymers.
105 g ionic liquids, solid polymer electrolytes, ceramics, and Si, LiFePO4, and LiMn2O4 electrodes) with
106 iobium-doped barium strontium titanium oxide ceramics, and silicon.
107 morphous materials, the fabrication of glass ceramics, and the mechanism of biomineralization.
108                                              Ceramics are an important class of materials with widesp
109                      The properties of glass-ceramics are defined by microstructure, crystal morpholo
110                       Ultra-high temperature ceramics are desirable for applications in the hypersoni
111                Hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) ceramics are expected to have wide applications at high
112 ates that more macroscopic structures in the ceramics are involved in lipid preservation as well.
113 rd realities of these new materials: brittle ceramics are not easily formed into long flexible conduc
114 ecially Sr0.7Pb0.3TiO3 (SPT), imply that SPT ceramics are promising materials for tunable capacitor a
115 at glass-infiltrated alumina and spinel core ceramics are resistant to damage accumulation and streng
116 ion; and, moreover, that strengths of dental ceramics are significantly lower after multi-cycle loadi
117 a (YSZ) and zirconia-toughened alumina (ZTA) ceramics are tactfully applied as dielectric coating mat
118                      Silicon nitride (Si3N4) ceramics are used in numerous applications because of th
119                                Ferroelectric ceramics are widely used as sensors and actuators for th
120                                         Foam ceramics are widely used in industrial applications due
121        Alloplasts, such as hydroxyapatite or ceramics, are also used as osteoconductive materials tha
122       Zirconias, the strongest of the dental ceramics, are increasingly being fabricated in monolithi
123 ategy for the use of crystalline nonsilicate ceramics as a reinforcing phase of polymeric composite b
124 ese microlattices, with polymers, metals, or ceramics as constituent materials, is made possible by p
125   The cold sintering process (CSP) densifies ceramics at much lower temperatures than conventional si
126 ol for ideal phase-property relationships of ceramics at the atomic scale.
127                                              Ceramics based on group IV-V transition metal borides an
128                                        Glass-ceramics based on jeffbenite may be transparent or opaqu
129 s on model flat laminates of selected dental ceramics bonded to clear polycarbonate bases (simulating
130 y exemplify the first high-entropy non-oxide ceramics (borides) fabricated but also possess a unique
131 ment of low- to medium-strength silica-based ceramics but requires multiple pretreatment steps of the
132 d to result in higher strength and toughness ceramics, but their processing is challenging as metals
133 he room temperature plastic deformability of ceramics by artificially introducing abundant defects in
134   Petrographic analysis of Formative Mexican ceramics by J. B. Stoltman et al. (see the companion pie
135 e suppressed in normally brittle martensitic ceramics by providing a fine-scale structure with few cr
136 red in most cases to prepare nanocrystalline ceramics by sintering, owing to the concurrent nature of
137 translucency and strength of polycrystalline ceramics can be achieved through microstructural tailori
138       Here, we show how the strength of ZrB2 ceramics can be increased to more than 800 MPa at temper
139 trength values for zirconium diboride (ZrB2) ceramics can exceed 1 GPa at room temperature, but these
140                                      Because ceramics cannot be cast or machined easily, three-dimens
141 uccessfully shift the MPB of these lead-free ceramics closer to room temperature, as required for sol
142  the microscale in nominally identical UO(2) ceramics (CMX5-A and CMX5-B), implying the presence of m
143                                    Currently ceramics coating materials used in metal implants can re
144             In this study, we present porous ceramics combining the antibacterial effect of copper wi
145                                   Metals and ceramics commonly consist of space-filling arrays of sin
146  variety of materials that include polymers, ceramics, composites and metals.
147  classes of biomaterials (polymer hydrogels, ceramics, composites, and cell aggregates) may be used f
148                 Here we show that a class of ceramics comprising the entire lanthanide oxide series,
149       Bioinspired "brick-and-mortar" alumina ceramics containing a nickel compliant phase are synthes
150 s focused on the development of high-entropy ceramics, containing four or more metallic components di
151              The resulting highly structured ceramics could have applications in areas ranging from q
152 , such as those found in two-phase polymers, ceramics, dendritic solid-liquid mixtures and order-diso
153        The clinical success of modern dental ceramics depends on an array of factors, ranging from in
154 ,000) obtained in xNd: BaTiO3 (x = 0.5 mol%) ceramics derived from the counterpart nanoparticles foll
155                                              Ceramics destined for use in hostile environments such a
156 ia (e.g., Zpex Smile) and lithia-based glass-ceramics (e.g., IPS e.max CAD HT).
157 ctric tunability and high figure of merit of ceramics, especially Sr0.7Pb0.3TiO3 (SPT), imply that SP
158 brittle materials such as intermetallics and ceramics exhibit a martensitic transformation but fail b
159 rocanasite (Al2O3-CaO-F-K2O-Na2O-SiO2) glass-ceramics exhibit fracture toughness values of up to 5.0
160 nd fatigue parameters for 3 reinforced glass-ceramics (fluormica [FM], leucite [LR], and lithium disi
161         Despite recent interest in amorphous ceramics for a variety of nuclear applications, many det
162 g this concept into the design of metals and ceramics for advanced applications is an attractive pros
163 iquid-metal pumping is enabled by the use of ceramics for the mechanical and sealing components, but
164  compared to existing ultra-high temperature ceramics (for example, a rate of material loss over 12 t
165 in seconds, including ultra-high-temperature ceramics (for example, hafnium carbonitride) and refract
166 nd an absence of aquatic foods, including in ceramics from coastal sites, except in the Western Balti
167      Aluminosilicates (AS) are ubiquitous in ceramics, geology, and planetary science, and their glas
168 cluding the properties of granular media and ceramics, glass formation, and discrete geometry.
169                    In order to develop glass-ceramics, glass is initially prepared via high temperatu
170 eric dental ceramics systems-micaceous glass-ceramics, glass-infiltrated alumina, feldspathic porcela
171 aceous glass-ceramic (MGC), and "structural" ceramics-glass-infiltrated alumina and yttria-stabilized
172 ntaining hydroxyapatite/tricalcium phosphate ceramics (HA/TCP) in the form of blocks, powder, and HA/
173 T) in particular, of these submicron alumina ceramics has been examined with the Rayleigh-Gans-Debye
174 e variation of Bi(0.95)La(0.05)FeO(3) (BLFO) ceramics has been studied under violet to UV irradiation
175 tral to the design of high-performance Si3N4 ceramics, has been sought for many years.
176 their brittleness-a problem shared with most ceramics-has severely limited their reliability.
177  behaviors and spin dynamics in Mn-doped BFO ceramics have been investigated systematically.
178 nging from metals to electrically insulative ceramics have been successfully densified resulting in h
179                            Glasses and glass-ceramics have had a tremendous impact upon society and c
180                                 High-entropy ceramics have potential to improve the mechanical proper
181                                              Ceramics have some of the highest strength- and stiffnes
182 crostructures using Low Temperature Co-Fired Ceramics, have been studied.
183      A significant barrier to new alloys and ceramics, however, is that targeted starting materials m
184  in combination with calcium phosphate (CaP) ceramics, however, they have recently become the target
185 extured Pb(Mg(1/3)Nb(2/3))O(3)-Pb(Zr,Ti)O(3) ceramics illustrate that k can reach same magnitude as t
186 rom the local resonance between the embedded ceramics in a flexible cellular matrix and the attacking
187  were performed on fluoroapatite (FAP) glass-ceramics in mineralizing solutions containing recombinan
188                  Current methods cannot join ceramics in proximity to temperature-sensitive materials
189                   Petrography shows that the ceramics in question (and hence their carved motifs) hav
190 structural durability of actinide-containing ceramics in terms of an atomistic understanding of the f
191               As a result, most high-entropy ceramics incorporate only a few similar elements, limiti
192 ssing of mare's milk and carcass products in ceramics, indicating a developed domestic economy encomp
193                       Laser welding can make ceramics integral components in devices for harsh enviro
194                                      Shaping ceramics into complex 3D geometries is desirable yet cha
195                                   Welding of ceramics is a key missing component in modern manufactur
196 and affordable synthesis of Li(+) functional ceramics is crucial for the scalable production of solid
197  dislocations on the mass transport in ionic ceramics is important for understanding the behavior of
198                                Leucite glass-ceramics (&lt; 1 microm) showed minimal matrix microcrackin
199  good candidate for low temperature co-fired ceramics (LTCC) technology.
200                                        Glass-ceramics M1A and M2A had higher mean BFS and characteris
201 that have not been reported for ceramics and ceramics-matrix-composite structures, such as flyweight
202                                          Few ceramics meet these criteria and much work has been devo
203 siloxane-based materials, including glasses, ceramics, mesoporous molecular sieves and catalysts, ela
204  spectrum of materials, including hydrogels, ceramics, metals and plastics, significantly abrogated f
205                  The (Na0.5Bi0.5)(Mo1-xWx)O4 ceramics might be good candidate for low temperature co-
206              The advantages of these 'living ceramics' might give them applications as optical and el
207 T, TP, and CR values for a variety of dental ceramics, mostly measured in-house but also cited from t
208 manufacturing (CAM)-fabricated high-strength ceramics-namely, alumina and zirconia-are widely accepte
209 s well as gelatin composite systems based on ceramics, naturally-occurring polymers, and synthetic po
210 ragmentation of rocks, concrete, metals, and ceramics, none of the known models suffices for macrosco
211              These applications also require ceramics of zero temperature coefficients at the resonan
212               Manufacturing of leucite glass-ceramics often leads to materials with inhomogeneous mic
213 s, organic polymers, inorganic crystals, and ceramics on the inner walls of preformed capillaries, us
214                       However, current Y-TZP ceramics on the market lack the aesthetics of competitiv
215                                   Functional ceramics, once integrated with flexibility, hold great p
216        Simultaneously hard and tough nitride ceramics open new venues for a variety of advanced appli
217                Understanding the response of ceramics operating in extreme environments is of interes
218 reasingly complex societies that did not use ceramics or loom-based weaving.
219 ted zirconia abutments veneered with pressed ceramics or on CAD/CAM zirconia abutments veneered with
220 atively analogous features as, e.g., ferroic ceramics or phase-transforming solids, and the discrete
221                         Exported Olmec-style ceramics originated from the San Lorenzo region of the G
222 paration of metal modified precursor derived ceramics (PDCs) and concentrates on the rare non-oxide s
223 Amorphous silicon oxycarbide polymer-derived ceramics (PDCs), synthesized from organometallic precurs
224 y after spraying on such common materials as ceramics, plastics, metals, and wood.
225                   Unparalleled by metals and ceramics, polymer-based AM plays a key role in the emerg
226 aluated in four dental ceramics: "aesthetic" ceramics-porcelain and micaceous glass-ceramic (MGC), an
227                      The resulting dense hBN ceramics possess 2-3 times the strength of traditional h
228 psulating nanocarbon filaments in refractive ceramics produces highly efficient, adjustable, and dura
229                             Glass, frits and ceramics production, as well as fertilizers are among th
230 l should be immobilized within mineral-based ceramics rather than glass because of their superior aqu
231 unctional synthesizability of multicomponent ceramics, regardless of chemistry and structure.
232 a new class of submicron grain-sized alumina ceramics relative to the current state-of-the-art dental
233 ibrittle materials, including coarse-grained ceramics, rocks, stiff foams, fiber composites, wood, an
234 itive manufacturing of polymers, metals, and ceramics, scaled and accurate production of structured c
235                             Rare-earth oxide ceramics should find widespread applicability as robust
236                          All the infiltrated ceramics show subsurface cone fracture and quasi-plastic
237 de ion conducting yttria-stabilised zirconia ceramics show the onset of electronic conduction under a
238                           Experimental glass-ceramics showed an increased leucite crystal number and
239                           Cells treated with ceramics significantly increased pro-inflammatory gene e
240 ed microchannels in Low Temperature Co-Fired Ceramics substrates was characterized and strategies for
241 n also be extended to more complicated ionic ceramics such as UO(2), highlighting the generality of t
242  inorganic-organic analogues of conventional ceramics, such as Ruddlesden-Popper phases and perovskit
243 gies and materials indicate that relative to ceramics, such polymers have lower figures of merit but
244 processes of Li on a Li-ion conductive glass-ceramics surface is studied with ~30 nm resolution.
245 operty can be used for templating nanoporous ceramics, surface patterning for electronic devices, or
246 r, Hertzian responses on four generic dental ceramics systems-micaceous glass-ceramics, glass-infiltr
247 process in commercially used polycrystalline ceramics that are agglomerations of a very large number
248 ansformation and lead to robust shape memory ceramics that are capable of many superelastic cycles up
249 mization, such as the introduction of glazed ceramics that are compositionally related to the lead gl
250 ructural metamaterials composed of nanoscale ceramics that are simultaneously ultralight, strong, and
251 er explore the origin of CP in co-doped TiO2 ceramics, the I-V behavior was studied on single grain a
252 mponents, but owing to the brittle nature of ceramics their use requires careful engineering.
253 rent materials categories, including metals, ceramics, thermoset, and thermoplastic polymers.
254 used to improve the mechanical properties of ceramics, this work represents a step towards the atomic
255 sy layer.To improve mechanical properties in ceramics through grain boundary engineering, precise mec
256 of diverse solids, including glass, silicon, ceramics, titanium and aluminium.
257 e nanoelements may be added into glasses and ceramics to form nanocomposites with enhanced properties
258                        Realising engineering ceramics to serve as substrate materials in high-perform
259 s to ensure an optical interaction volume in ceramics to stimulate nonlinear absorption processes, ca
260  dated by associated radiocarbon samples and ceramics to the Late Formative period or Late Monte Alba
261 present a new type of ultra-high temperature ceramics (UHTCs) as well as a new class of high-entropy
262 nd PbZr0.95Ti0.05O3 (PZT 95/5) ferroelectric ceramics under identical loading conditions.
263  day the distribution of these lipids in the ceramics was virtually unknown, which severely limits ou
264 cal materials, and structural and biomimetic ceramics, we examine some of the newer strategies in dea
265                   Using well-dated decorated ceramics, we track changes in network topology at 50-y i
266                            Glasses and glass-ceramics were characterized by XRD, SEM, and Dilatometry
267                                              Ceramics were formed by high-temperature sintering of co
268 witching behavior of strontium lead titanate ceramics were investigated.
269 a0.5Bi0.5)(Mo1-xWx)O4 (x = 0.0, 0.5 and 1.0) ceramics were prepared via solid state reaction method.
270  reported upconversion surface coatings, the ceramics were significantly more durable and had greater
271      Fine-grained, translucent leucite glass-ceramics were synthesized and produced high mean BFS.
272                  The (Nb + In) co-doped TiO2 ceramics were synthesized by conventional solid-state si
273 mental (A, M1A and M2A) and commercial glass-ceramics were tested by the BFS test.
274                            Thermally sprayed ceramics, when infiltrated with polymer, exhibit synergi
275 tivity varepsilon33 in [001]-textured PbTiO3 ceramics where domain wall motions are absent.
276 al spectra for Y(2)(Sn,Ti)(2)O(7) pyrochlore ceramics, where the overlap of signals from different lo
277 erbium-doped lead magnesium niobium titanate ceramics which exhibit exceptionally high strain (3.19%
278 lthough durable materials such as metals and ceramics, which are generally hydrophilic, can be render
279 ompositional space of ultra-high temperature ceramics, which can withstand extreme environments excee
280 used with a variety of refractory metals and ceramics, which fosters the opportunity to design and fu
281 rated on calcium carbonate inclusions in the ceramics, which suggests that precipitation of fatty aci
282  term, the alpha-decay taking place in these ceramics will severely disrupt their crystalline structu
283 rements performed on MPB tuned NBT-06BT bulk ceramics with a combination of A-site substitutions.
284                 Here we report visible laser ceramics with a composition of 0.5%Pr(3+),5%Y(3+):SrF(2)
285 k in the permittivity is observed in all the ceramics with a grain size near 1 mum and can be attribu
286 ons in various matrices or incorporated into ceramics with applications in energy conversion, solid-s
287                                 Dense BaTiO3 ceramics with different grain sizes were fabricated by e
288 te damage accumulation in alumina and spinel ceramics with different pre-form grain morphologies and
289 ced durability of fluorocanasite-based glass-ceramics with increasing Al2O3 concentration is most lik
290 omaterials and the chemical compatibility of ceramics with many highly corrosive environments.
291                                  Bioinspired ceramics with micron-scale ceramic "bricks" bonded by a
292                       Architected metals and ceramics with nanoscale cellular designs, e.g., nanolatt
293 ders of magnitude higher than those of other ceramics with similar graphene or carbon nanotube conten
294 ion mechanisms is critical for the design of ceramics with superior mechanical properties.
295                                 Shape memory ceramics with these properties represent a new class of
296 terials including metals, semiconductors and ceramics with up to near-atomic resolution.
297 rmore, the model effectively identifies foam ceramics with varying compositions and formulations and
298 s loop can be observed in Bi(1-z)La(z)FeO(3) ceramics with z <= 0.15, which magnetization quasi-linea
299 actual image of meta-stable protective tribo-ceramics within thicknesses of a few atomic layers.
300 t techniques cannot easily and rapidly shape ceramics without weakening their properties, especially

 
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