Understanding the thermal durability of wood-based composites (WBCs) using crack propagation fracture toughness

Holzforschung ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sweta Mahapatra ◽  
Arijit Sinha ◽  
John A. Nairn

Abstract Wood-based composites (WBCs) are engineered wood products that are commonly used in the building and furniture industries. Most research on their durability has relied on internal bond testing, bending strength properties, or damage observations. An alternative property with potentially more information is fracture toughness. Here, fracture toughness was continuously measured during crack propagation for three different composites—oriented strand board (OSB), medium density fiberboard (MDF), and particleboard (PB). The resulting plots for fracture toughness as a function of crack growth are known as the material’s R curve. To assess the role of temperature on WBC durability, R curve experiments were repeated at 10 different temperatures from 20 to 200 °C. Trends in experimental results could be described by a trilinear model. OSB and MDF toughness initially increased with temperature and then decreased above 80 °C. The toughness of PB, which was made with a different resin, remained constant or decreased slightly until decreasing faster above 140 °C. Both the resin type and composite structure affected the results.

2013 ◽  
Vol 815 ◽  
pp. 233-239
Author(s):  
Xue Quan Liu ◽  
Cun Guang Ding ◽  
Chang Hai Li ◽  
Yi Li ◽  
Li Xin Li ◽  
...  

A fibrous monolith cemented carbide with WC-6Co as cell and WC-20Co as cell boundaries was produced through hot co-extrusion process in this paper. The density, hardness, bending strength and fracture toughness of the fibrous monolith cemented carbide were tested, and the fracture and crack propagation were observed by metalloscope and SEM. The results showed that the bending strength and fracture toughness of the fibrous monolith cemented carbides was remarkably improved 71.91% and 45.7% respectively, while the hardness was slightly decreased 1% compared with WC-6Co composites. It is the reason that the tougher shell WC-20Co with higher bending strength and fracture toughness can absorb more fracture energy, which can slow down and prevent the crack propagating from brittle core WC-6Co.


Author(s):  
Xinyu Yan ◽  
Shouren Wang ◽  
Daosheng Wen ◽  
Gaoqi Wang ◽  
Wentao Liu

Tungsten carbide composites were prepared by cold-pressing and hot-pressing sintering; fracture toughness and bending strength of the specimens were tested. The microstructures of HfC/WC/Co composites were observed with the SEM. The mathematical models were established to investigate the relationship between stress intensity factors of crack straight-through, crack deflection, and crack bifurcation with crack length, based on the crack propagation energy release rate. The simulation software ABAQUS was used to verify the four crack propagation methods of crack straight-through, crack deflection, crack bifurcation and crack pinning. The simulation results show that adding appropriate amount of HfC can effectively improve the fracture toughness and bending strength of the composites. The homogeneous distribution of HfC and Co in the matrix has a significant effect on the improvement of the strength and toughness of the composites, and the improvement mechanism is to disperse or transfer the stress at the crack tip to HfC by crack deflection, crack bifurcation, crack pinning, transcrystalline fracture, etc. As a result, the stress concentration at the crack tip in the matrix is reduced, and the toughness of the composites is improved.


2010 ◽  
Vol 24 (15n16) ◽  
pp. 2869-2874 ◽  
Author(s):  
KI WOO NAM ◽  
JONG SOON KIM ◽  
SEUNG WON PARK

Silicon carbide ( SiC ) exhibits good strength at high temperatures and resistance to radioactivity. However, it has poor fracture toughness. The ability to heal cracks represents a very desirable means of overcoming this weakness. This study focuses on the crack-healing behavior and bending strength of SiC ceramics to which sintering additives have been added. Optimized crack-healing condition was found to be 1hr at an atmospheric level of 1100 °C. The maximum crack size that can be healed at the optimized condition was a semi-elliptical surface crack of 450 µm in diameter. Si oxide was revealed to be the principle material involved in crack-healing.


1986 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 120-123 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Kendall ◽  
N. McN. Alford ◽  
S. R. Tan ◽  
J. D. Birchall

It is demonstrated both theoretically and experimentally that fracture toughness does not directly influence the Weibull modulus of ceramic bending strength for materials that obey the Griffith criterion for crack propagation. Weibull modulus remains unchanged as toughness is increased. However, toughness variations with crack length do affect the Weibull modulus. Thus materials that display R-curve behavior or Dugdale character give an increased Weibull modulus and appear more reliable.


Author(s):  
Sunjung Kim ◽  
Caroline Baril ◽  
Shiva Rudraraju ◽  
Heidi-Lynn Ploeg

Abstract Aseptic loosening is the most common reason for long-term revision of total joint replacement (TJR). Infection is the main reason for short-term revision of TJR. In our previous studies, experimental results showed that acrylic bone cement-loaded with antibiotics had a detrimental effect on cement strength such as bending strength, compressive strength, and fracture toughness. This result implied that the mechanical failure of antibiotic loaded bone cement was potentially related to porosity volume fraction. Hence, the objective of this study was to investigate the effect of pore size and distribution on bone cement fracture toughness. The effect of pores was analyzed using the extended Finite Element Method (X-FEM) method to model crack propagation and its modulation by pore sizes and locations. Numerically obtained load-displacement responses were compared to experimental results. We observed that crack propagation is affected by several pore parameters; as expected these include pore size and pore locations (pore-pore interactions) and are related to implicit pore-crack interactions. The experimental and numerical investigations presented in the current study contribute to a better understanding of the effect of pores on bone cement fracture toughness; key insights include the identification of a critical pore size for reduced fracture toughness, and relative insensitivity of crack propagation to stochastically distributed pore locations.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefan Veigel ◽  
Jörn Rathke ◽  
Martin Weigl ◽  
Wolfgang Gindl-Altmutter

Adhesives on the basis of urea-formaldehyde (UF) and melamine-urea-formaldehyde (MUF) are extensively used in the production of wood-based panels. In the present study, the attempt was made to improve the mechanical board properties by reinforcing these adhesives with cellulose nanofibers (CNFs). The latter were produced from dissolving grade beech pulp by a mechanical homogenization process. Adhesive mixtures with a CNF content of 0, 1, and 3 wt% based on solid resin were prepared by mixing an aqueous CNF suspension with UF and MUF adhesives. Laboratory-scale particle boards and oriented strand boards (OSBs) were produced, and the mechanical and fracture mechanical properties were investigated. Particle boards prepared with UF containing 1 wt% CNF showed a reduced thickness swelling and better internal bond and bending strength than boards produced with pure UF. The reinforcing effect of CNF was even more obvious for OSB where a significant improvement of strength properties of 16% was found. For both, particle board and OSB, mode I fracture energy and fracture toughness were the parameters with the greatest improvement indicating that the adhesive bonds were markedly toughened by the CNF addition.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ehsan Moshkelgosha

Shape memory ceramics (SMCs) are promising candidates for actuators in extreme environments such as high temperature and corrosive applications. Despite outstanding energy dissipation, compared to metallic shape memory materials, SMCs suffer from a sudden brittle fracture. While the interaction of crack propagation and phase transformation in SMCs has been the subject of several experimental and theoretical studies, mainly at the macroscale, the fundamental understanding of the dynamic interaction of crack propagation and martensitic transformation is poorly understood. This dissertation attempts to provide a mathematical model for crack propagation in transformable zirconia to address the shortage of classical methods. This dissertation uses the phase field framework to fully couple the martensitic transformation to the variational formulation of brittle fracture. Firstly, the model is parameterized for single crystal zirconia, which experiences tetragonal to monoclinic transformation during crack propagation. For mode I of fracture, the opening mode, crack shows an unusual propagation path that is in good agreement with the experiments and indicates the significant role of phase transformation on the crack propagation path. The investigation on the effect of lattice orientation on crack propagation shows that the lattice orientation has a significant influence not only on the crack propagation path but also on the magnitude of the transformation toughening. Secondly, the model is parameterized for tetragonal polycrystalline zirconia, and the experimental data from literature were used to validate the model. The model predicts the three dominant crack propagation patterns which were observed experimentally, including the secondary crack initiation, crack branching, and grain bridging. The model shows the critical role of texture engineering in toughening enhancement. Polycrystalline zirconia samples with grains that make low angles between the a-axis in the tetragonal phase and the crack plane, show higher transformation toughening, due to maximum hydrostatic strain release perpendicular to the crack tip. The model also shows the grain boundary engineering as a way to enhance the transformation toughening. The maximum fracture toughness occurs at a specific grain size, and further coarsening or refinement reduces the fracture toughness. This optimum grain size is the consequence of the competition between the toughening enhancement and MT suppression with grain refinement. Finally, we parameterized the model for the 3D single crystal zirconia, which experienced stress- and thermal-induced tetragonal to monoclinic transformation. The developed 3D model considers all 12 monoclinic variants, making it possible to acquire realistic microstructures. Surface uplifting, self-accommodated martensite pairs formation, and transformed zone fragmentation were observed by the model, which agrees with the experimental observations. The influence of the crystal lattice orientation is investigated in this study, which reveals its profound effects on the transformation toughening and crack propagation path.


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