4.7 Article

Damage progression in thermal barrier coating systems during thermal cycling: A nano-mechanical assessment

Journal

MATERIALS & DESIGN
Volume 166, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.matdes.2019.107615

Keywords

Thermal barrier coating; Fracture toughness; Nanohardness; High-speed nanoindentation; Thermal cycling fatigue

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This paper studies how the nano-mechanical properties of thermal barrier coatings (TBCs) vary during thermal cycling, as a way to shed new light on their failure mechanisms. In particular, high-throughput nanoindentation revealed the evolution of hardness and elastic modulus distributions of plasma-sprayed yttria-stabilized zirconia (YSZ) top layers. The evolution of fracture toughness of the YSZ layers and the thermally grown oxide (TGO) formed onto the vacuum plasma-sprayed NiCoCrAlY bond coat were investigated by nanoindentation micro-pillar splitting. The TGO fracture toughness increases up to approximate to 2.5-3.5 MPa root m at the early stages of thermal cycling, followed by a rapid decrease to approximate to 2.0 MPa root m after a critical TGO thickness of approximate to 5 mu m is reached. Consequently, interface damage is initially limited to short cracks within the YSZ material. As TGO thickness exceeds the critical threshold, multiple cracks originate within the TGO and join through the YSZ to form long delamination cracks. Joining is favoured by a simultaneous loss in YSZ strength, testified by a decrease in the nanomechanical properties (hardness, elastic modulus) of both high- and low-porosity top coats. This is due to microstructural changes occurring because of the continuous interplay between sintering and thermal shock cracking in the YSZ layers. (C) 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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