What is polymer crazing?
Crazing develops when excessive tensile stress is applied to a polymer, leading to microvoid formation in a plane normal to the stress. 8,11,16,26. The voids initiate at microscopic inhomogeneities in the polymer, and are stabilised by fibrils of plastically deformed polymer chains.
What does crazing look like?
What is Crazing? Have you ever seen a piece of pottery where the surface looks like it’s covered with a spider web of tiny cracks? That’s called crazing. They are not cracks in the actual piece of pottery but rather surface-level cracks in the fired glazed of the piece.
Can you fix crazing?
Although crazing is considered a glaze defect, it can also be corrected by adjusting the clay body. A glaze adjustment might not be possible if it is under so much tension that there is no room in the recipe for correction.
What causes polycarbonate crazing?
The majority of times you see cracking and crazing in plastics such as Acrylic, Perspex, Plexiglas (PMMA), Polycarbonate (PC) and Ultem (PEI) is due to lack of the correct heat treatment. These such plastics need careful normalising and annealing steps throughout the machining, bonding and polishing process.
Can crazes carry load?
A craze is different from a crack in that it cannot be felt on the surface and it can continue to support a load. Furthermore, the process of craze growth prior to cracking absorbs fracture energy and effectively increases the fracture toughness of a polymer.
What is craze cracking?
Craze cracks on concrete is when the surface of concrete develops a lot of fine cracks. Sometimes called map-cracking or alligator cracking, crazing of concrete is a result of conditions and curing methods at the point the concrete is laid or even the way it is finished.
What does crazed glass look like?
Crazing is a web of tiny cracks that can appear on the lenses of eyeglasses coated with an anti-reflective coating. Looking through crazed lenses can make your world appear blurry.
Can you use dishes with crazing?
Crazing on dinnerware pieces is never okay You may have heard it called crackling or even, heaven forbid, grazing. Most collectors use pieces as display-only and therefore accept crazed pieces into their collection though as a general rule, crazing isn’t a good thing.
Why does my glaze craze?
Crazing is caused by the glaze being under too much tension. This tension occurs when the glaze contracts more than the clay body during cooling. Because glazes are a very thin coating, most will pull apart or craze under very little tension. Crazing can make a food safe glaze unsafe and ruin the look of the piece.
What is the difference between cracking and crazing?
As nouns the difference between crazing and crack is that crazing is a covering of fine cracks on a hard smooth surface such as a glazed object or car exterior while crack is (senseid)a thin and usually jagged space opened in a previously solid material.
Does crazing affect the value of pottery?
Crazing translates to fine cracks in the glaze or surface layer of porcelain wares. The presence of crazing usually diminishes the value of objects but it can depend on the severity of the damage and rarity of the crazed piece.