scholarly journals Reliability Analysis of a Structural Ceramic Combustion Chamber

Author(s):  
Jonathan A. Salem ◽  
Jane M. Manderscheid ◽  
Marc R. Freedman ◽  
John P. Gyekenyesi

The Weibull modulus, fracture toughness, and thermal properties of a silicon nitride material used to make a gas turbine combustor were experimentally measured. The location and nature of failure origins resulting from bend tests were determined with fractographic analysis. The measured Weibull parameters were used along with thermal and stress analysis to determine failure probabilities of the combustor with the CARES design code. The effects of data censoring, FEM mesh refinement, and fracture criterion were considered in the analysis.

2008 ◽  
Vol 591-593 ◽  
pp. 436-440
Author(s):  
João Marcos K. Assis ◽  
Francisco Piorino Neto ◽  
Francisco Cristóvão Lourenço de Melo ◽  
Maria do Carmo de Andrade Nono

A comparative study between alumina added niobia ceramics and two alumina zirconia composites from nanostructured TZP (7% and 14% weight) was made. On this composites the zirconia were yttria stabilized and the alumina were submicron structured. As sintering aid a mixture of magnesia, niobia and talc were used on all samples. The sintering was performed at 1450 oC during 60 minutes. The characteristic grain size and shape of an alumina and zirconia powders, aggregates and agglomerates were characterized. The sintering ceramics were evaluated through hardness, fracture toughness and 4 point bending test. Weibull statistic was applied on the flexural results. Although the fracture toughness result from ZTA were lower, and seems to be affected by the liquid fase, the hardness and Weibull modulus were higher than alumina niobia. The grains size and the homogeneity of its distributions on the microstructure of this ceramics was correlated to these higher values. The results from these alumina zirconia composites showed a potential to apply as a ballistic armor material.


2001 ◽  
Vol 16 (8) ◽  
pp. 2264-2270 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hirokazu Kawaoka ◽  
Tomohiko Adachi ◽  
Tohru Sekino ◽  
Yong-Ho Choa ◽  
Lian Gao ◽  
...  

Highly densed silicon nitride ceramics with various α/β phase ratios were produced by pulse electric current sintering process. The β-phase content of Si3N4 in sintered materials varied from 20 to 100 wt% depending on the sintering condition. The microstructure was observed by scanning electron microscopy and investigated by image analysis. Young's modulus, hardness, fracture toughness, and strength were strongly dependent on the α/β phase ratio. The fracture toughness increased from 4.6 MPa m1/2 for 20-wt% b-phase content to 8.2 MPa m1/2 for 95-wt% β-phase content, and the fracture strength showed a maximum value of about 1.6 GPa at 60-to-80-wt% β-phase content.


1988 ◽  
Vol 120 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.-M. Yang ◽  
J.-C. Chou ◽  
C. V. Burkland

AbstractThe fracture behavior of a 3-D braided Nicalon fiber-reinforced SiC matrix composite processed by chemical vapor infiltration (CVI) has been investigated. The fracture toughness and thermal shock resistance under various thermomechanical loadings have been characterized. The results obtained indicate that a tough and durable structural ceramic composite can be achieved through the combination of 3-D fiber architecture and the low temperature CVI processing.


2018 ◽  
Vol 782 ◽  
pp. 289-296 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elia Marin ◽  
Alfredo Rondinella ◽  
Francesco Boschetto ◽  
Matteo Zanocco ◽  
Brian J. McEntire ◽  
...  

Due to the favourable combination of mechanical strength and fracture toughness, silicon nitride has been applied as a load-bearing bioceramic, in particular for implants used in spinal fusion surgery. Only recently it has been observed that the supposedly inert surface of silicon nitride is actually bioactive: a slow, but not negligible, pH controlled, ionic exchange between nitrogen and oxygen leads to the formation and elution of silicic acid and ammonia groups, also resulting in an effective protection against bacteria colonization. These properties could be further modulated by chemical and mechanical treatments.


Author(s):  
K. Linga Murty ◽  
Chang-Sung Seok

Ferritic steels commonly used for pressure vessels and reactor supports in light water reactors (LWRs) exhibit dynamic strain aging (DSA) resulting in decreased ductility and toughness. In addition, recent work indicated decreased toughness during reverse-cyclic loading that has implications on reliability of these structures under seismic loading conditions. We summarize some of our recent work on these aspects along with synergistic effects, of interstitial impurity atoms (IIAs) and radiation induced point defects, that result in interesting beneficial effects of radiation exposure at appropriate temperature and strain-rate conditions. Radiation-defect interactions were investigated on pure iron, Si-killed mild steel, A533B, A516, A588 and other reactor support and vessel steels. In all cases, DSA is seen to result in decreased ductility accompanied by increased work-hardening parameter. In addition to mechanical property tests, fracture toughness is investigated on both A533B and A516 steels. While dips in fracture toughness are observed in A533B steel in the DSA region, A516 steel exhibited at best a plateau. The reasons could lie in the applied strain-rates; while J1c tests were performed on A533B steel using 3-point bend tests on Charpy type specimens, CT specimens were used for A516 steel. However, tensile and 3-point bend tests on similar grade A516 steel of different vintage did exhibit distinct drop in the energy to fracture. Load-displacement curves during J1c tests on CT specimens did show load drops in the DSA regime. The effect of load ratio (R) on J versus load-line displacement curves for A516 steel is investigated from +1 to −1 at a fixed normalized incremental plastic displacement of 0.1 (R = 1 corresponds to monotonic loading). We note that J-values are significantly reduced with decreasing load ratio. The work-hardening characteristics on the fracture surfaces were studied following monotonic and cyclic loading fracture tests along with the stress-field analyses. From the hardness and the ball-indentation tests, it was shown that decreased load ratio (R) leads to more strain hardening at the crack tip resulting in decreased fracture toughness. From the stress field analysis near the crack tip of a compact tension fracture toughness test specimen, a cycle of tensile and compressive loads is seen to result in tensile residual stresses (which did not exist at the crack tip before). These results are important to evaluations of flawed-structures under seismic loading conditions, i.e. Leak-Before-Break (LBB) and in-service flaw evaluation criteria where seismic loading is addressed. In addition, studies on fast vs total (thermal+fast) neutron spectra revealed unexpected results due to the influence of radiation exposure on source hardening component of the yield stress; grain-size of pure iron plays a significant role in these effects.


2007 ◽  
Vol 42 (18) ◽  
pp. 7920-7926 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Bučevac ◽  
S. Bošković ◽  
B. Matović ◽  
Lj. Živković ◽  
M. Vlajić ◽  
...  

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