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High-temperature plasticity effects in bridged cracks and subcortical crack growth in ceramic composites

โœ Scribed by C.H. Henager Jr.; R.H. Jones


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1993
Tongue
English
Weight
822 KB
Volume
166
Category
Article
ISSN
0921-5093

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โœฆ Synopsis


The time-dependent plasticity of the crack-wake bridging zone at high temperatures is found to control the rate of subcritical crack growth in continuous-fiber-reinforced ceramic composites. Subcritical crack growth measurements of ceramic matrix composites were conducted on materials consisting of chemical-vapor infiltrated SiC matrix reinforced with Nicalon fibers (SiC/SiCj) having C and BN fiber-matrix interfaces. Crack velocities were determined as a function of stress intensity in pure Ar and in Ar + 2000 ppm O~ at 1100 ยฐC. A stage II regime, where the crack velocity is weakly dependent on the applied stress intensity, characterized the V-K data over a range of stress intensities corresponding to the R curve of the material. This stage II behavior was followed by a stage llI, or power-law, regime at higher stress intensities. Oxygen increased the crack velocity in the stage II regime and shifted the stage II to stage III transition to lower stress intensities. A two-dimensional micromechanics approach modeled the time-dependence of crack bridging by allowing fiber creep and was able to rationalize the observed velocity measurements and the stage II to stage III transition.


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