The sintering behavior of Sandia chem-prep high field varistor materials was studied using techniques including in situ shrinkage measurements, optical and scanning electron microscopy and x-ray diffraction. A thorough literature review of phase behavior, sintering and microstructure in Bi(sub 2)O(sub 3)-ZnO varistor systems is included. The effects of Bi(sub 2)O(sub 3) content (from 0.25 to 0.56 mol%) and of sodium doping level (0 to 600 ppm) on the isothermal densification kinetics was determined between 650 and 825 C. At (ge) 750 C samples with (ge)0.41 mol% Bi(sub 2)O(sub 3) have very similar densification kinetics, whereas samples with (le)0.33 mol% begin to densify only after a period of hours at low temperatures. The effect of the sodium content was greatest at (approx)700 C for standard 0.56 mol% Bi(sub 2)O(sub 3) and was greater in samples with 0.30 mol% Bi(sub 2)O(sub 3) than for those with 0.56 mol%. Sintering experiments on samples of differing size and shape found that densification decreases and mass loss increases with increasing surface area to volume ratio. However, these two effects have different causes: the enhancement in densification as samples increase in size appears to be caused by a low oxygen internal atmosphere that develops whereas the mass loss is due to the evaporation of bismuth oxide. In situ XRD experiments showed that the bismuth is initially present as an oxycarbonate that transforms to metastable (beta)-Bi(sub 2)O(sub 3) by 400 C. At (approx)650 C, coincident with the onset of densification, the cubic binary phase, Bi(sub 38)ZnO(sub 58) forms and remains stable to >800 C, indicating that a eutectic liquid does not form during normal varistor sintering ((approx)730 C). Finally, the formation and morphology of bismuth oxide phase regions that form on the varistors surfaces during slow cooling were studied.