Damage Evolution and Fracture Behavior of C/SiC Minicomposites with Different Interphases under Uniaxial Tensile Load
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Experimental Procedures
- Type I Interphase, i.e., the 6 h PyC single-layer interphase. Using propylene as a carbon source precursor, argon as dilution, and protective gas, the PyC single-layer interphase was deposited at approximately 1000 °C with a deposition pressure of 200 Pa and a deposition duration of 6 h. The thickness of the PyC single-layer interphase was approximately 40.3 nm, as shown in Figure 2a,b.
- Type II Interphase, i.e., the 18 h PyC single-layer interphase. The PyC deposition temperature was approximately 1000 °C with a duration of 18 h. The thickness of the PyC single-layer interphase was approximately 109 nm, as shown in Figure 2c,d.
- Type III Interphase, i.e., the (PyC-SiC)4 interphase. In the CVD process, the mixed gas of propylene–argon and MTS–hydrogen–argon was alternately introduced into the CVD furnace. The deposition temperature of the PyC interface was approximately 1000 °C, and the deposition temperature of the SiC interface was approximately 1050 °C. (PyC/SiC)n multi-layer interfaces were obtained by controlling the deposition time and alternating times. The first layer of the (PyC/SiC)n multi-layer interface is the PyC layer, and the last layer is the SiC layer. The thickness of the (PyC-SiC)4 interphase was approximately 888.9 nm, as shown in Figure 2e,f.
3. Results and Discussions
3.1. Tensile Behavior of C/SiC Minicomposites
- For FF_2 C/SiC with the 6 h single-layer PyC interphase, the tensile curve of the minicomposite exhibited linear elastic behavior until the proportional limit stress (PLS) of approximately σPLS = 95 MPa was reached, and the tensile curve appeared nonlinear due to the matrix cracking and interface debonding until the applied stress of approximately σ = 176 MPa was reached. Then, the tensile curve displayed linear elastic behavior again until the tensile fracture at the strength of approximately σUTS = 321.9 MPa occurred.
- For FF_3 C/SiC with the 18 h single-layer PyC interphase, the tensile curve of the minicomposite exhibited linear elastic behaviour until reaching the proportional limit stress (PLS) of approximately σPLS = 40 MPa, and the tensile curve appeared nonlinear due to matrix cracking and interface debonding until reaching the applied stress of approximately σ = 120 MPa. Then, the tensile curve displayed linear elastic behavior again until the tensile fracture at the strength of approximately σUTS = 204.6 MPa occurred. Before the tensile fracture occurred, the tensile curve showed an obvious zig-zag pattern due to the fibers’ fracture.
- For FF_4 C/SiC with the 4-layer PyC-SiC interphase, the tensile curve of the minicomposite exhibited linear elastic behavior until the proportional limit stress (PLS) of approximately σPLS = 89 MPa was reached, and the tensile curve appeared nonlinear due to matrix cracking and interface debonding until reaching the applied stress of approximately σ = 138 MPa. Then, the tensile curve displayed linear elastic behavior again until the tensile fracture at the strength of approximately σUTS = 172.2 MPa occured. Under tensile loading, the tensile curve did not show zig-zag behavior.
- For NC_2 C/SiC with the 6 h single-layer PyC interphase, the tensile curve of the minicomposite exhibited linear elastic behavior until the proportional limit stress (PLS) of approximately σPLS = 196 MPa was reached, and with an increasing load, the zig-zag behavior occured at the applied stresses of σ = 249, 353, and 441 MPa, due to matrix cracking and fiber fracture. The composite tensile fracture occured at the strength of approximately σUTS = 441.5 MPa.
- For NC_3 C/SiC with the 18 h single-layer PyC interphase, the tensile curve of the minicomposite exhibited linear elastic behavior until the proportional limit stress (PLS) of approximately σPLS = 72 MPa was reached, and the tensile curve appeared nonlinear due to matrix cracking and interface debonding until reaching the applied stress of approximately σ = 141 MPa. Then the tensile curve displayed linear elastic behavior again until the tensile fracture at the strength of approximately σUTS = 298.4 MPa occurred. There was no zig-zag pattern under tensile loading.
- For NC_4 C/SiC with the 4-layer PyC-SiC interphase, the tensile curve of the minicomposite exhibited linear elastic behavior until the proportional limit stress (PLS) of approximately σPLS = 94 MPa was reached, and with increasing load, zig-zag behavior occured at the stress of σ = 130 MPa, mainly due to matrix cracking and a continually increasing load. The tensile curve showed nonlinear behavior until the tensile fracture at the strength of approximately σUTS = 311.9 MPa occurred.
- Stage I, an elastic response coupled with partial re-opening of thermal microcracking.
- Stage II, multiple matrix microcracking perpendicular to the applied loading.
- Stage III, crack opening and related fiber/matrix and mostly bundle/matrix interfaces and inter-bundle debonding.
- Stage IV, progressive transfer of load to the fiber and gradual fiber failure until composite failure/fracture.
3.2. Tensile Behavior of Notched C/SiC Minicomposites
- At the beginning of the test, there are a large amount of initial microcracks existing in the matrix, which result from the CTE mismatch between the carbon fiber and the SiC matrix, especially for the thick matrix. These cracks differ in length, shape, and orientation, being aligned parallel to the fiber (longitudinal) or perpendicular to the fiber (transverse). One of the microcracks even runs through the width of the sample, as shown in Figure 6a.
- With increasing load, a new microcrack begins to nucleate near the tip of the notch. This crack grows along the direction of the notch, accompanied by the matrix open and fiber breakage. In this field of view, there occurs progressive growth and coalescence of cracks, within which, the two cracks (indicated as a red arrow and a blue arrow) seem to become the main cracks, and others display a somewhat obvious change under tension, as shown in Figure 6b. The stress near the tip of cracks relaxes along with this zone, which also means that this zone is the fracture plane, as shown in Figure 6c.
- When all fibers break, the sample fractures along the main crack growth path, as shown in Figure 6d.
3.3. Fiber Pull-out of C/SiC Minicomposite
4. Conclusions
- There is no evident influence on the strength utilization of carbon filaments in the process of weaving cloth from the original carbon fiber. The single-layer PyC interphase exhibits much better mechanical properties than the multi-layer interphase does if the reasonable thickness of the PyC layer is effectively controlled.
- The bundle integrity plays an important role in the mechanical properties as well as in the proper interphase. Lacking bundle integrity, the C/SiC minicomposite cannot take the load as a whole, and the fracture of the minicomposite exhibits multi-stage damage during the tension test, which implies that some of the fiber filaments result in failure, and remaining filaments are disrupted under further loading.
- A large number of fibers pulling out of the samples with both single-layer and multi-layer interphases can be clearly observed. Some clearages of fiber break-off and cavities after fiber pull-out remain on the fracture section, which indicates the failure when extensive fiber pull-out occurs.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Material | 1st Group | 2nd Group | |
---|---|---|---|
Carbon fiber type | T-700TM-12k | ||
Reinforcement | fiber filament (FF) | non-woven cloth (NC) | |
Interphase | 2# | 6 h PyC single layer | |
3# | 18 h PyC single layer | ||
4# | 4-layer PyC-SiC multi-layer | ||
Matrix | CVI-derived SiC |
Sample Number | Interface Type | Interface Processing | SiC Matrix Deposition |
---|---|---|---|
2# | 6 h PyC single layer | Temperature: 1000 °C Pressure: 200 Pa Duration: 6 h Gas precursor: propylene Gas flow rate: 160 mL/min Dilute gas and flow rate: argon with 400 mL/min | Stage1: 1050 °C for 50 h Stage2: 1100 °C for 100 h |
3# | 18 h PyC single layer | Temperature: 1000 °C Pressure: 200 Pa Duration: 18 h Gas precursor: propylene Gas flow rate: 160 mL/min Dilute gas and flow rate: argon with 400 mL/min | Stage1: 1050 °C for 50 h Stage2: 1050 °C for 100 h Stage3: 1100 °C for 100 h |
4# | 4-layer PyC-SiC multi-layer | Interphase: (Py-SiC)4 For PyC, Temperature: 1000 °C Duration: 3 h Gas precursor: propylene Gas and flow rate: 160 mL/min C3H6 and 400 mL/min Ar For SiC, Temperature: 1050 °C Duration: 3 h Gas precursor: Methyltrichlorosilane Gas and flow rate: 160 mL/min H2 as carrier gas and 200 mL/min Ar as dilute gas | Stage1: 1050 °C for 100 h Stage2: 1100 °C for 100 h |
Sample Number | Total Length/mm | Width/mm | Gauge Length/mm |
---|---|---|---|
FF-2 | 67 | 7 | 10 |
FF-3 | 67 | 7.5 | 10 |
FF-4 | 67 | 7 | 10 |
NC-2 | 76 | 5.5 | 20 |
NC-3 | 83 | 4 | 20 |
NC-3 | 86 | 4 | 20 |
Samples | Max Load, N | Cross-Section/Net-Section Area, mm2 | Strength, MPa |
---|---|---|---|
FF_2 | 727.537 | 2.26 | 321.9 |
FF_3 | 840.91 | 4.11 | 204.6 |
FF_4 | 518.41 | 3.01 | 172.2 |
NC_2 | 1028.73 | 2.33 | 441.5 |
NC_3 | 713.08 | 2.39 | 298.4 |
NC_4 | 695.58 | 2.23 | 311.9 |
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Zhang, Z.; Li, L.; Chen, Z. Damage Evolution and Fracture Behavior of C/SiC Minicomposites with Different Interphases under Uniaxial Tensile Load. Materials 2021, 14, 1525. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14061525
Zhang Z, Li L, Chen Z. Damage Evolution and Fracture Behavior of C/SiC Minicomposites with Different Interphases under Uniaxial Tensile Load. Materials. 2021; 14(6):1525. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14061525
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhang, Zhongwei, Longbiao Li, and Zhaoke Chen. 2021. "Damage Evolution and Fracture Behavior of C/SiC Minicomposites with Different Interphases under Uniaxial Tensile Load" Materials 14, no. 6: 1525. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14061525
APA StyleZhang, Z., Li, L., & Chen, Z. (2021). Damage Evolution and Fracture Behavior of C/SiC Minicomposites with Different Interphases under Uniaxial Tensile Load. Materials, 14(6), 1525. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14061525