Coupled Thermo-mechanical Micromechanics Modeling of the Influence of Thermally Grown Oxide Layer in an Environmental Barrier Coating System
Author(s) -
Trenton M. Ricks,
Steven M. Arnold,
Bryan J. Harder
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
american society for composites 2022
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.12783/asc33/26027
Subject(s) - micromechanics , materials science , thermal barrier coating , delamination (geology) , composite material , spallation , coating , silicon carbide , silicon , layer (electronics) , oxide , substrate (aquarium) , composite number , metallurgy , paleontology , oceanography , biology , subduction , tectonics , geology , physics , quantum mechanics , neutron
Environmental Barrier Coatings (EBCs) have emerged as a promising means of protecting silicon based ceramic matrix composite (CMC) components for high temperature applications (e.g., aircraft engines). EBCs are often used to protect an underlying material (substrate) such as silicon carbide from extreme thermal/chemical environments. In a typical CMC/EBC system, an EBC may or may not be adhered to an underlying substrate with a bond coat (e.g., silicon). Irrespective, systems that utilize EBCs are susceptible to a number of failure modes including oxidation/delamination, recession, chemical attack and dissolution, thermomechanical degradation, erosion, and foreign object damage. Current work at NASA Glenn Research Center is aimed at addressing these failure modes in EBC systems and developing robust analysis tools to aid in the design process. The Higher-Order Theory for Functionally Graded Materials (HOTFGM), a precursor to the High- Fidelity Generalized Method of Cells micromechanics approach, was developed to investigate the coupled thermo-mechanical behavior of functionally graded composites and will be used herein to assess the development and growth of a lowstiffness thermally grown oxide (TGO) layer in EBC/CMC systems without a silicon bond coat. To accomplish this a sensitivity study is conducted to examine the influence of uniformly and nonuniformly grown oxide layer on the associated driving forces leading to mechanical failure (spallation) of EBC layer when subjected to isothermal loading.
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