Modeling stress evolution in porous ceramics subjected to molten silicate infiltration and corrosion

2021 ◽  
pp. 109698
Author(s):  
Z.Y. Liu ◽  
L. Yang ◽  
Q.Q. Zhou ◽  
Y.C. Zhou ◽  
G. Yan
1997 ◽  
Vol 473 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. D. Thouless

ABSTRACTDiffusional mechanisms of electromigration and stress relaxation involve the flow of atoms in response to a gradient in chemical potential along an interface. This gradient in chemical potential may be provided by the component of an electric field parallel to the interface, or it may be established by the normal component of stresses along it. In either case, considerations of continuity of the potential dictate that diffusive flow must also be induced along any other boundary that intersects the interface. As an example, in this paper, a model system that contains grain boundaries normal to an applied electric field is analyzed. While the electric field does not directly induce diffusion along these grain boundaries, it is shown that a complimentary flux must be induced along them. The effect of this flux on electromigration is discussed in this paper. Furthermore, it is well-known that non-homogeneous diffusion of matter along boundaries induces elastic distortions and stress gradients. These in turn, influence the diffusion process. The effect of these elastic distortions on the atomic flux has been examined by considering diffusion along a single interface in an elastic medium. Prior studies of diffusional cavity growth have established the magnitudes of non-dimensional time-scales over which the deposition of atoms along the grain boundaries can be assumed to be essentially uniform. Such an assumption considerably simplifies analyses for stress evolution in these problems. The appropriate time-scales over which such a simplification can be made for electromigration are discussed in this paper, and illustrated by some model calculations.


2014 ◽  
Vol 51 ◽  
pp. 230-238 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria A. Nikolinakou ◽  
Peter B. Flemings ◽  
Michael R. Hudec

Author(s):  
H. M. Kerch ◽  
R. A. Gerhardt

Highly porous ceramics are employed in a variety of engineering applications due to their unique mechanical, optical, and electrical characteristics. In order to achieve proper design and function, information about the pore structure must be obtained. Parameters of importance include pore size, pore volume, and size distribution, as well as pore texture and geometry. A quantitative determination of these features for high porosity materials by a microscopic technique is usually not done because artifacts introduced by either the sample preparation method or the image forming process of the microscope make interpretation difficult.Scanning electron microscopy for both fractured and polished surfaces has been utilized extensively for examining pore structures. However, there is uncertainty in distinguishing between topography and pores for the fractured specimen and sample pullout obscures the true morphology for samples that are polished. In addition, very small pores (nm range) cannot be resolved in the S.E.M. On the other hand, T.E.M. has better resolution but the specimen preparation methods involved such as powder dispersion, ion milling, and chemical etching may incur problems ranging from preferential widening of pores to partial or complete destruction of the pore network.


2017 ◽  
Vol 747 (4) ◽  
pp. 32-36
Author(s):  
V.A. GURIEVA ◽  
◽  
A.V. DOROSHIN ◽  
K.M. VDOVIN ◽  
Yu.E. ANDREEVA ◽  
...  
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