Brittle Materials
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
A material is considered to be brittle if it exhibits low strain at failure when subjected to stress. In other words, unlike ductile materials, it has very little plastic capability and hence no specific yield point. Many optics—both refractive lenses and reflective mirrors—consist of brittle materials. All glasses (fused silica, ULE™, ZERODUR®, BK-7, borosilicate, etc.) as well as most engineering ceramics (zinc sulfide, zinc selenide, germanium, silicon, silicon carbide, etc.) fall into the brittle category.
Online access to SPIE eBooks is limited to subscribing institutions.
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Glasses

Ceramics

Corrosion

Silica

Failure analysis

Polishing

Zinc

Back to Top