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WRC 178

M00000530

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WRC 178 Joining Ceramics to Metals and Other Materials

Bulletin / Circular by Welding Research Council, Inc., 1972

H. E. Pattee

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The use of ceramic-to-metal seals and joints has assumed increased importance in today's technology. Historically, the joining of ceramics to metals came of age as an industrial process during World War II in Germany where, under wartime conditions, it was recognized, that electronic vacuum tubes with increased reliability and longer performance could be produced by substituting ceramic materials for glass. Pulfrich and Vatter established procedures to metallize ceramics, thus producing surfaces that could be readily wet by brazing filler metals. Some of the most significant of the many domestic and foreign patents assigned to Pulfrich, Vatter, and the firms that employed them are listed among the references. While the results obtained by these early workers appear somewhat crude in the light of current developments, the basic concepts of metallizing are still valid and these procedures, or modifications thereof, are in current use to prepare ceramic surfaces for joining.

The technology of joining ceramics to metals has progressed steadily since its beginnings in the late 1930's. Like other joining processes, the joining of ceramics to themselves and to other materials was long considered to be more an art than a science. Because of extensive research efforts directed to the development of procedures for producing reliable ceramic-to-metal joints, much has been accomplished in the intervening years to establish a joining technology based on sound fundamental procedures and an understanding of the reactions that occur during joining.