Composites were made from carbon fibers and gelatin using a solventcasting or solution-impregnation technique. Relationships between the fiber volume fraction (Vf), glycerol (plasticizer) content, gelatin content, fiber form, and mechanical properties (tensile strength and modulus, elongation at bre
The preparation and mechanical properties of the unidirectional carbon fiber reinforced zirconia composite
β Scribed by G.H. Zhou; S.W. Wang; J.K. Guo; Z. Zhang
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 1001 KB
- Volume
- 28
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0955-2219
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β¦ Synopsis
Unidirectional carbon fiber reinforced calcium stabilized zirconia composites (uni-C f /ZrO 2 ) were prepared by slurry infiltration and hot-pressing method. The room temperature mechanical properties were investigated and the fracture features of composites were observed. A flexural strength of 588.0 MPa and fracture toughness of 15.4 MPaβ’m 1/2 parallel to the fiber direction for the composite hot-pressed at 1500 β’ C was attributed to the fiber pull-out. With increasing hot-pressing temperature from 1500 β’ C to 1650 β’ C, the relative density was augmented, but the mechanical properties of composites degraded gradually. Especially at 1650 β’ C, the flexural strength and fracture toughness decreased significantly to 173.2 MPa and 5.0 MPaβ’m 1/2 , respectively. Thermodynamic calculation and XRD, TEM investigations showed that carbon fibers reacted with ZrO 2 to form ZrC phase at 1650 β’ C, and then formed chemical bonding and led to a strong interface between fiber and matrix, which resulted in the decrease of mechanical properties of the composite hot-pressed at higher temperatures. Moreover, the mechanical properties of carbon fibers degraded by the above reaction had also an adverse effect on the mechanical properties of the composite.
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