Aluminium oxynitride


Aluminium oxynitride is a transparent ceramic composed of aluminium, oxygen and nitrogen. Aluminium oxynitride is optically transparent in the near-ultraviolet, visible, and mid-wave-infrared regions of the electromagnetic spectrum. It is four times as hard as fused silica glass, the same hardness of 9 as sapphire, and nearly 115% as hard as magnesium aluminate spinel. It can be fabricated into transparent windows, plates, domes, rods, tubes, and other forms using conventional ceramic powder processing techniques.
Aluminium oxynitride is the hardest polycrystalline transparent ceramic available commercially. Because of its relatively low weight, distinctive optical and mechanical properties, and resistance to oxidation or radiation, it shows promise for applications such as bulletproof, blast-resistant, and optoelectronic windows. Aluminium oxynitride–based armor has been shown to stop multiple armor-piercing projectiles of up to .50 BMG.

Properties

Aluminium oxynitride is resistant to various acids, bases, and water.

Mechanical

Aluminium oxynitride has the following mechanical properties:

Thermal and optical

Aluminium oxynitride has the following thermal and optical properties:

Applications

Aluminium oxynitride is used for infrared-optical windows, with greater than 80% transparency for 2 mm thickness at wavelengths below about 4 micrometers, dropping to near zero at about 6 micrometers. It has also been demonstrated as an interface passivation layer in some semiconductor-related applications.
Aluminium oxynitride has less than half the weight and thickness of glass-based transparent armor. Aluminium oxynitride armor of thickness is capable of stopping .50 BMG armor-piercing rounds, which can penetrate of traditional glass laminate.
In 2005, the United States Air Force began testing aluminium-oxynitride-based armor.

Manufacture

Aluminium oxynitride can be fabricated as windows, plates, domes, rods, tubes and other forms using conventional ceramic powder processing techniques. Its composition can vary slightly: the aluminium content from about 30% to 36%, which has been reported to affect the bulk and shear moduli by only 1–2%. The fabricated greenware is subjected to heat treatment at elevated temperatures followed by grinding and polishing to transparency. It can withstand temperatures of about in inert atmospheres. The grinding and polishing substantially improves the impact resistance and other mechanical properties of armor.

Patents

Patents related to aluminium oxynitride include:
  • Aluminium oxynitride having improved optical characteristics and method of manufacture TM Hartnett, RL Gentilman, 1984
  • Process for producing polycrystalline cubic aluminium oxynitride JW McCauley, 1980
  • Transparent aluminium oxynitride and method of manufacture RL Gentilman, EA Maguire, 1985;, 1988
  • Transparent aluminium oxynitride-based ceramic article JP Mathers, 1993