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Effect of Load Rate on Tensile Strength of Various Cfccs at Elevated Temperatures - An Approach to Life Prediction Testing

Authors :
Sung R. Choi
John P. Gyekenyesi
Source :
25th Annual Conference on Composites, Advanced Ceramics, Materials, and Structures: A: Ceramic Engineering and Science Proceedings
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2008.

Abstract

Strength of three continuous fiber-reinforced ceramic composites, including SiC/CAS-11, SiC/MAS-5 and SiC/SiC, was determined as a function of test rate in air at 1100 - 1200 C. All three composite materials exhibited a strong dependency of strength on test rate, similar to the behavior observed in many advanced monolithic ceramics at elevated temperatures. The application of the preloading technique as well as the prediction of life from one loading configuration (constant stress-rate) to another (constant stress loading) suggested that the overall macroscopic failure mechanism of the composites would be the one governed by a power-law tyw of damage evolution/accumulation, analogous to slow crack growth commonly observed in advanced monolithic ceramics. It was further found that constant stress-rate testing could be used as an alternative to life prediction test methodology even for the composite materials at least for the short range of lifetime.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
25th Annual Conference on Composites, Advanced Ceramics, Materials, and Structures: A: Ceramic Engineering and Science Proceedings
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........1ef05175d71e8a862d41d32c8c42f386
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/9780470294680.ch69