A green body is an object whose main constituent is weakly bound clay material, usually in the form of bonded powder or plates before it has been sintered or fired.

Unfired clay is a common example of a green body.

In ceramic engineering, the most common method for producing ceramic components is to form a green body comprising a mixture of the ceramic material and various organic or inorganic additives, and then to fire it in a kiln to produce a strong, vitrified object.[1] Additives can serve as solvents, dispersants (deflocculants), binders, plasticizers, lubricants, or wetting agents.[2]

This method is used because of difficulties with the casting of ceramics — due to their extremely high melting temperature and viscosity (relative to other materials such as metals and polymers).

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Ring, Terry A. (1996). "Ceramic Green Body Formation". Fundamentals of Ceramic Powder Processing and Synthesis. pp. 609–679. doi:10.1016/B978-012588930-8/50017-6. ISBN 9780125889308.
  2. ^ Rahaman, Mohamed N. (2003-07-31). Ceramic Processing and Sintering. ISBN 9780824709884.
 
An Etruscan ceramic amphora ca. 540–530 BC.