Li Xi , Shaoling Li , Kaiyuan Xue , Xiaochuan Cui , Bowen Wang , Ying Li , Daining Fang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Carbon fibre reinforced silicon carbide (C/SiC) ceramic matrix composites have attracted considerable attention due to their exceptional properties and extensive potential applications as high-temperature structural materials. However, due to their complex structure and manufacturing defects, C/SiC composites exhibit intricate mechanical behaviour under thermal-mechanical-oxidative coupling environments. To date, systematic studies on the internal damage evolution and failure mechanisms of C/SiC composites under high-temperature oxidative environments are lacking. In this study, a combination of synchrotron X-ray micro-computed tomography (SR-μCT) and in-situ experiments under thermal-mechanical-oxidative coupling environments at room temperature and 1650 °C in air was used to characterize the internal microstructures and damage evolution processes of C/SiC composites at different loading levels. Additionally, the 3D strain fields during in-situ loading were quantitatively analysed using the Digital Volume Correlation (DVC) method. The findings underscore the substantial impact of oxidative damage on the mechanical response of C/SiC composites, particularly concerning tensile properties and fracture modes. At room temperature, severe delamination, fibre bundle pull-out and interfacial debonding occurred internally. Whereas, under high-temperature atmospheric conditions, severe fibre oxidation reactions occurred at the specimen edges, resulting in rapid porosity escalation. Crack initiation from surface defects followed by rapid inward propagation is observed. Moreover, while the strain distribution remains relatively uniform until fracture, a pronounced concentration of strain is evident near the fracture zones at room temperature, with an even greater concentration observed at 1650 °C. Notably, the region of concentrated strain within the 3D deformation field corresponds closely to the final fracture location, as revealed by quantitative DVC analysis.
期刊介绍:
Composites Part B: Engineering is a journal that publishes impactful research of high quality on composite materials. This research is supported by fundamental mechanics and materials science and engineering approaches. The targeted research can cover a wide range of length scales, ranging from nano to micro and meso, and even to the full product and structure level. The journal specifically focuses on engineering applications that involve high performance composites. These applications can range from low volume and high cost to high volume and low cost composite development.
The main goal of the journal is to provide a platform for the prompt publication of original and high quality research. The emphasis is on design, development, modeling, validation, and manufacturing of engineering details and concepts. The journal welcomes both basic research papers and proposals for review articles. Authors are encouraged to address challenges across various application areas. These areas include, but are not limited to, aerospace, automotive, and other surface transportation. The journal also covers energy-related applications, with a focus on renewable energy. Other application areas include infrastructure, off-shore and maritime projects, health care technology, and recreational products.