4.7 Article

Environmental effects on the strength and impact damage resistance of alumina based oxide/oxide ceramic matrix composites

Journal

CERAMICS INTERNATIONAL
Volume 47, Issue 12, Pages 17268-17275

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ceramint.2021.03.038

Keywords

Oxide; oxide; Ceramic matrix composite; Impact; Tensile strength; Residual strength; Interlaminar shear

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High temperature and humidity exposure have adverse effects on the impact damage resistance and mechanical strength of Nextel 610/alumina silicate ceramic matrix composites, leading to differences in damage characteristics in various areas and affecting the tensile and interlaminar shear performance.
In this study the effects of high temperature and moisture on the impact damage resistance and mechanical strength of Nextel 610/alumina silicate ceramic matrix composites were experimentally evaluated. Composite laminates were exposed to either a 1050C isothermal furnace-based environment for 30 consecutive days at 6 h a day, or 95% relative humidity environment for 13 consecutive days at 67C. Low velocity impact, tensile and short beam strength tests were performed on both ambient and environmentally conditioned laminates and damage was characterized using a combination of non-destructive and destructive techniques. High temperature and humidity environmental exposure adversely affected the impact resistance of the composite laminates. For all the environments, planar internal damage area was greater than the back side dent area, which in turn was greater than the impactor side dent area. Evidence of environmental embrittlement through a stiffer tensile response was noted for the high temperature exposed laminates while the short beam strength tests showed greater propensity for interlaminar shear failure in the moisture exposed laminates. Destructive evaluations exposed larger, more pronounced delaminations in the environmentally conditioned laminates in comparison to the ambient ones. External damage metrics of the impactor side dent depth and area directly influenced the postimpact tensile strength of the laminates while no such trend between internal damage area and residual strength could be ascertained.

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