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Showing posts from 2019
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COLLECTION OF VARIETY OF CEREMIC PRODUCT GALLERY
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Ceramic Items We are engaged in manufacturing and exporting Ceramic Items. Our products are highly preferred not only in national market but also in international market. These are demanded for their elegant appearance, durability and reliability. These are available to the client in various sizes at affordable prices. Indian Ceramic Pot, Ceramic Pot is some of our products. Our products are availed to the client at reasonable price.
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Chinese ceramics Chinese ceramics show a continuous development since pre-dynastic times and are one of the most significant forms of Chinese art and ceramics globally. The first pottery was made during the Palaeolithic era. Chinese ceramics range from construction materials such as bricks and tiles, to hand-built pottery vessels fired in bonfires or kilns , to the sophisticated Chinese porcelain wares made for the imperial court and for export. Porcelain was a Chinese invention and is so identified with China that it is still called "china" in everyday English usage. Most later Chinese ceramics, even of the finest quality, were orcelain dish with a dragonmade on an industrial scale, thus few names of individual potters were recorded. Many of the most important kiln workshops were owned by or reserved for the Emperor, and large quantities of Chinese export porcelain were exported as diplomatic gifts or for trade from an early date, initially to East Asia and...
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Ceramic art Ceramic art is art made from ceramic materials, including clay . It may take forms including artistic pottery , including tableware , tiles , figurines and other sculpture . Ceramic art is one of the arts , particularly the visual arts . Of these, it is one of the plastic arts . While some ceramics are considered fine art , as pottery or sculpture, some are considered to be decorative , industrial or applied art objects. Ceramics may also be considered artefacts in archaeology . Ceramic art can be made by one person or by a group of people. In a pottery or ceramic factory, a group of people design, manufacture and decorate the art ware. Products from a pottery are sometimes referred to as "art pottery". [1] In a one-person pottery studio, ceramists or potters produce studio pottery . The word "ceramics" comes from the Greek keramikos (κεραμικος), meaning "pottery", which in turn comes from keramos (κεραμος) meaning "potter's...
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Short about Ceramic Design The Master’s degree programme in Ceramic Design is a specialisation in the use of silica-based materials such as clay, concrete, plaster and glass as ceramic materials in various professional contexts. The overall objective of the programme is to prepare students for careers as ceramic designers through independent specialisation in relation to research, artistic research practice and in relevant practical and professional contexts. The objective of the programme is to expand the student’s understanding of specific ceramic materials and working processes on the basis of their own chosen specialisation, and further to support the development of their personal artistic profile under the guidance of the programme’s teachers.
Best Ceramic Coating for Cars  Ceramic coating’s usefulness has seen its use grow significantly fast over the last decade. As such, many companies are producing this gold paint for ceramics, giving consumers a wide variety of products to choose from. One only needs to choose the coating that best suits their car and environmental needs. Take a look at the different products for ceramic polymer nanotechnology paint protection below. 1. AvalonKing Armor Shield IX – Best Car ceramic Coating I ever Seen Our top pick. We found Armor Shield IX the best option for the daily driver or weekend warrior looking for ease of application, long last results, and overall quality. 2. Migliore Strata Coating – High Gloss Ceramic Coating & Car Sealant I won’t sugarcoat it. Keeping your car in tip-top condition is a tough job, especially because of the maintenance works you need to do on a regular basis. Eventually, your patience might wear thin and you’ll look for convenient solutions. 3. ...
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Uses of Ceramics Ceramic products are hard, porous, and brittle. As a result, they are used to make pottery, bricks, tiles, cements, and glass. Ceramics are also used at many places in gas turbine engines. Bio-ceramics are used as dental implants and synthetic bones. Given below are some other important uses of ceramics. Uses of Whitewares Whitewares find application in spark plugs, electrical insulators, laboratory equipments, crucibles, dishes, and high-class potteries. Uses of Clay Clay is the starting raw material for manufacturing bricks, tiles, terracotta, pottery, earthenwares, sewer, drain pipes, and covers for electrical cables. Uses of Stonewares Stonewares are used for constructing sanitary fixtures, such as sinks and bath tubs. Stonewares are also used in the construction of piping vessels, drainage pipes, underground cable sheathings, sewerage pipes, home pipes, absorption towers, valves, and pumps in the chemical industry. They are cheaper than many other const...
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8 WAYS CERAMIC IS USED IN MODERN, DAY-TO-DAY LIFE Do you think you come into contact with ceramic in your day-to-day life? We’ve put together a list of 8 ways ceramic is used in modern life, the obvious and the not so obvious. Take a read and you might just be surprised! THE OBVIOUS 1. Tiles Our roofs, bathrooms and kitchens are covered in ceramic tiles. Ceramic can be glazed with different colours and printed with any design, so tiles can be tailored to different people’s tastes. They are tough and easy to wipe clean once glazed which is perfect for use in the kitchen or bathroom! 2. Cookware Majority of crockery and pots are made from ceramic. From unglazed to glazed, mortar and pestles to the mug that holds your tea, ceramic is a staple material in the kitchen. Ceramic knives have also become common, they are one of the hardest knives you can buy yet are extremely lightweight! 3. Brick Our homes are made from brick and are held together by cement, both of which are types of ceramic...
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A brief history of ceramics 23,000–25,000 BCE: Earliest use of human ceramics (for example, in figurines of humans and other animals made of pottery, discovered at Dolní Věstonice in the Czech Republic).     14,000BCE: Ceramic tiles are being made in India and Mesopotamia. 18,000–14,000 BCE: Earliest use of pottery vessels (for example, in Jiangxi, China ). 7500–6500BCE: First use of mud bricks. 6000 BCE: Earliest known kiln (Yarim Tepe site in modern Iraq) 5000–8000 BCE: First use of glazes. Nile Valley of Egypt. According to [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=PAZR-A9Ra6EC] 3500–5000BCE: Earliest use of glass (according to Eric Le Bourhis in Glass: Mechanics and Technology ). 3500–2500BCE: Invention of the potter's wheel . Mid-late 1900s: Development of effective glass and ceramic insulators for telegraphs and electric power distribution. 1940s: Development of ferrite magnets for such things as loudspeakers and electric motors. 1986: High-temperature s...
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How do you make ceramics? Ceramics generally start with a clay-based material dug from the ground that's mixed with water (to make it soft and flexible) and other materials, squashed into shape, then fired at high-temperature in a large industrial oven called a kiln. Firing is what most ceramics have in common; the very word "ceramic" originally comes from Sanskrit and means "to burn." These four basic processes—digging the raw material from the ground, adding water, shaping, and firing—have been used to make ceramics for thousands of years. The US Geological Survey lists six types of clay mined in the United States: common clay, kaolin (China clay), bentonite, ball clay, fuller's Earth, and fire clay, and each has a number of different uses: Common clay is mostly used for bricks, cement, and aggregate. Kaolin is widely used for making glossy paper. (It's also used in kaolin and morphine, a medicine for upset stomachs.) Bentonite has a variety of ...
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What are ceramics used for? The interesting question is why ceramics behave like this—and the no-less-interesting answer boils down to materials science : it's all to do with how the atoms inside are bonded together. That explains how most materials work In metals, for example, atoms are relatively weakly bonded (which is why most metals are fairly soft); their electrons are shared between them in a kind of sea that can "wash" right through them, which is (simplistically speaking) why they conduct electricity and heat . A material like rubber , on the other hand, is made of long-chain molecules (polymers) that are very weakly attached to one another; that's why raw, white, latex rubber is so stretchy and why black, vulcanized rubber (like that used in car tires) is harder and stronger, because heat-and-sulfur treatment makes strong cross-links form between the polymer chains, holding them tightly together. All the electrons are locked up in bonds of various kinds (...
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Why are ceramics like this? he interesting question is why ceramics behave like this—and the no-less-interesting answer boils down to materials science : it's all to do with how the atoms inside are bonded together. That explains how most materials work In metals, for example, atoms are relatively weakly bonded (which is why most metals are fairly soft); their electrons are shared between them in a kind of sea that can "wash" right through them, which is (simplistically speaking) why they conduct electricity and heat . A material like rubber , on the other hand, is made of long-chain molecules (polymers) that are very weakly attached to one another; that's why raw, white, latex rubber is so stretchy and why black, vulcanized rubber (like that used in car tires) is harder and stronger, because heat-and-sulfur treatment makes strong cross-links form between the polymer chains, holding them tightly together. All the electrons are locked up in bonds of various kinds ...
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What properties do ceramics have? As we've already seen, the most important general property of ceramics is that they're refractory: they're rough-and-tumble materials that will put up with fair amounts of abuse in the most ordinary and extraordinary situations. Just consider, most of us tile our kitchens and bathrooms because ceramic tiles are hard, waterproof, largely resistant to scratches, and keep on looking good for year upon year; but engineers also put (very different!) ceramic tiles on space rockets to protect them against heat when they whiz back to Earth. If we're summarizing their properties, we can say that ceramics have: High melting points (so they're heat resistant). Great hardness and strength. Considerable durability (they're long-lasting and hard-wearing). Low electrical and thermal conductivity (they're good insulators).
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All are the brief  declaration of the different minerals used in ceramics and the quality that minerals ensures.
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Types of ceramics Traditional ceramics Bricks, pottery, glass, porcelain, tiles, cement, and concrete are our classic, time-tested ceramics. Although they all have different uses, we can still think of them as general-purpose materials. Take tiles, for example. We can put them inside our homes or outside; on the walls, the floors, or the roof; and we can stick glass in our windows or poke away at it on our smartphone screens—we can even drink champagne out of it. Ceramics like this are ancient materials—ones our ancestors would recognize—that have gradually found more and more uses as the centuries have worn on. Advanced engineering ceramics By contrast, advanced ceramics are ones that have been engineered (mostly since the early 20th century) for highly specific applications. For example, silicon nitrides and tungsten carbides are designed for making exceptionally hard, high-performance cutting tools—though they do have other uses as well. Most modern engineered ceramics a...
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What are ceramics? Glass, tiles, pottery, porcelain, bricks, cement, diamond, and graphite—you can probably see from this little list that "ceramics" is a very broad term, and one we're going to have difficulty defining. What do all these very different materials have in common? From a chemical viewpoint, we define ceramics in terms of what they're not. So you'll find most science textbooks and dictionaries telling you ceramics are nonmetallic and inorganic solids (ones that aren't metal or based on carbon compounds); in other words, ceramics are what we're left with when we take away metals and organic materials (including wood , plastics , rubber , and anything that was once alive).
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Crystalline ceramics Crystalline ceramic materials are not amenable to a great range of processing. Methods for dealing with them tend to fall into one of two categories – either make the ceramic in the desired shape, by reaction in situ, or by "forming" powders into the desired shape, and then sintering to form a solid body. Ceramic forming techniques include shaping by hand (sometimes including a rotation process called "throwing"), slip casting , tape casting (used for making very thin ceramic capacitors), injection molding , dry pressing, and other variations. Noncrystalline ceramics Noncrystalline ceramics, being glass, tend to be formed from melts. The glass is shaped when either fully molten, by casting, or when in a state of toffee-like viscosity, by methods such as blowing into a mold. If later heat treatments cause this glass to become partly crystalline, the resulting material is known as a glass-ceramic, widely used as cook-tops and also as a glass c...
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Traditional Ceramics Ball clay, China clay, Feldspar, Silica, Dolomite, Talc, Calcite and Nepheline are the common materials used for most of the ceramic products. Each raw material contributes a certain property such as dry strength, plasticity, shrinkage, etc. to the ceramic body. Therefore, by careful selection of materials, desired properties are acquired for the final output. Powder preparation is a major consideration in the ceramic industry. Surface area, particle size and distribution, particle shape, density, etc. each have their own effect on production. Powder has to be prepared to meet required particle size, particle shape, and other requirements for a particular industry. Milling is done to get the desired particle size. Unlike in the ,advanced ceramics industry the purity of ceramic powder is not an issue in traditional ceramics.
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Ceramic materials are special because of their properties. They typically possess high melting points, low electrical and thermal conductivity values, and high compressive strengths. Also they are generally hard and brittle with very good chemical and thermal stability. Ceramic materials can be categorized as traditional ceramics and advanced ceramics. Ceramic materials like clay are categorized as traditional ceramics and normally they are made of clay, silica, and feldspar. As its name suggests, traditional ceramics are not supposed to meet rigid specific properties after their production, so cheap technologies are utilized for most of the production processes.
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There are variety of ceremic products are present with high quality .This one is the overveiw of how you can decore your room with ceremic product .Its the dream of every person to have a perfect room with attractive styling product and ceremic product is also one of them with full efficiency in perfection.