This document contains syllabi for four ceramic engineering courses:
1. Technical Elective 2 (Whitewares) focuses on manufacturing processes for ceramic whiteware products including formulation, production, firing, finishing and control of properties with case studies.
2. Ceramic Engineering as a Profession introduces aspects of ceramic engineering practice and career opportunities.
3. Ceramic Raw Materials and Processes discusses raw materials processing techniques and their effect on physical and chemical properties.
4. Crystal Chemistry covers basic principles of ceramic crystal structures and their relationships to properties.
This document contains syllabi for four ceramic engineering courses:
1. Technical Elective 2 (Whitewares) focuses on manufacturing processes for ceramic whiteware products including formulation, production, firing, finishing and control of properties with case studies.
2. Ceramic Engineering as a Profession introduces aspects of ceramic engineering practice and career opportunities.
3. Ceramic Raw Materials and Processes discusses raw materials processing techniques and their effect on physical and chemical properties.
4. Crystal Chemistry covers basic principles of ceramic crystal structures and their relationships to properties.
This document contains syllabi for four ceramic engineering courses:
1. Technical Elective 2 (Whitewares) focuses on manufacturing processes for ceramic whiteware products including formulation, production, firing, finishing and control of properties with case studies.
2. Ceramic Engineering as a Profession introduces aspects of ceramic engineering practice and career opportunities.
3. Ceramic Raw Materials and Processes discusses raw materials processing techniques and their effect on physical and chemical properties.
4. Crystal Chemistry covers basic principles of ceramic crystal structures and their relationships to properties.
This document contains syllabi for four ceramic engineering courses:
1. Technical Elective 2 (Whitewares) focuses on manufacturing processes for ceramic whiteware products including formulation, production, firing, finishing and control of properties with case studies.
2. Ceramic Engineering as a Profession introduces aspects of ceramic engineering practice and career opportunities.
3. Ceramic Raw Materials and Processes discusses raw materials processing techniques and their effect on physical and chemical properties.
4. Crystal Chemistry covers basic principles of ceramic crystal structures and their relationships to properties.
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COURSE SYLLABUS
Course Name TECHNICAL ELECTIVE 2 (WHITEWARES)
Unit processes and operations in Ceramic Whitewares. Control of physical, mechanical and chemical properties of structural clay products. Technology Course Description of whitewares manufacture with emphasis on product formulation, production, firing techniques, finishing, packaging and control of properties. Case studies of actual manufacturing problems. No. of Units for Lecture 3 units, lecture and/or Laboratory No. of Contact Hours per 3 hours, lecture week Prerequisites Ceramic Raw Materials and Processes Course Outline 1. Examples of Whiteware Products - Unit Processes and Operations in the Manufacture of Structural Clay Products 2. Control of Physical, Mechanical and Chemical Properties of Structural Clay Products 3, Manufacturing Technology for Whitewares 3.1 Product formulation 3.2 Production 3.3 Firing methods 3.4 Finishing 3.5 Packaging 3.6 Control of Properties 4. Case Studies of Manufacturing Problems
Experimental project to form a Whiteware product
Course Name CERAMIC ENGINEERING AS A PROFESSION Introduction to the various aspects of ceramic engineering practice designed to properly orient a freshman ceramic engineering student about Course Description the discipline and its many important applications to the real world. Career opportunities in ceramic engineering.
No. of Units for Lecture
1 unit, lecture and Laboratory No. of Contact Hours per 1 hour, lecture week Prerequisites None for STEM graduate Course Outline 1. Ceramic Engineering: scope and practice 2. Historical developments in ceramic materials and their impact on civilization 3. Modern trends in the field of ceramics 4. Societal needs, Impacts from global communities on ceramic markets 4. Job market and career opportunities for ceramic engineers 5. Outlook on ceramic materials in the future
Course Name CERAMIC RAW MATERIALS AND PROCESSES
Comprehensive discussion on the different ceramic raw materials used in the ceramic industry (e.g., kaolin, ball clay, red clay, feldspar, flint, Course Description alumina, silica, etc.), the processing techniques involved, and how these influence the physical and chemical properties of ceramic products. No. of Units for Lecture 4 units: 3 units, lecture; 1 unit, laboratory and Laboratory No. of Contact Hours per 6 hours: 3 hours, lecture; 3 hours, laboratory week Prerequisites Analytical Chemistry, Fundamentals of Materials Science and Engineering Course Outline 1. Overview of Ceramic Raw Materials and their Local Sources 1.1 Kaolins 1.2 Ball Clays 1.3 Red Clays 1.4 Feldspar 1.5 Flint 1.6 Alumina 1.7 Silica 1.8 Others 2. Processing Methods 2.1 Synthesis of powder by mechanical and chemical methods 2.2 Colloidal processing 2.3 Sol-gel processing 3. Effects of Processing on Physical and Chemical Properties Course Name CRYSTAL CHEMISTRY Basic principles and theories in ceramic crystals with emphasis on symmetry, point-, space- and lattice groups essential to the understanding Course Description of crystalline solids such as silicates and glass-ceramics including other related structures. Relationships of structure and chemistry with various crystal properties. No. of Units for Lecture 3 units, lecture and Laboratory No. of Contact Hours per 3 hours, lecture week Prerequisites Fundamentals of Materials Science and Engineering Course Outline 1. Crystal Structures 1.1 Periodic Structures (crystals, quasicrystals) vs. Amorphous Structures (glasses, amorphous silicon) 1.2 Bravais lattices 1.3 Crystal planes and directions 2. Symmetry Elements 2.1 Rotational axis of symmetry 2.2 Mirror planes 2.3 Rotation-inversion 2.4 Glide Planes 2.5 Screw Axis 3. Classification into Crystal Systems, Space Groups and Point Groups 4. Ceramic Crystal Structures 5. Relationships of Structure and Chemistry with Properties 5.1 Carbon (diamond, graphite, graphene, amorphous carbon) 5.2 Perovskite (piezoelectricity) 5.3 ZnS (sphalerite, wurtzite) 5.4 Silica (polymorphism) 5.5 Clay (swelling property of traditional clay and nanoclay) 5.6 Alumina (color depends on impurity dissolved in the crystal)