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Microstructural evolution of the latest generation of small‐diameter SiC‐based fibres tested at high temperatures
Author(s) -
HOCHET N.,
BERGER M. H.,
BUNSELL A. R.
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
journal of microscopy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.569
H-Index - 111
eISSN - 1365-2818
pISSN - 0022-2720
DOI - 10.1046/j.1365-2818.1997.d01-620.x
Subject(s) - materials science , intergranular corrosion , ultimate tensile strength , titanium , composite material , microstructure , carbon fibers , grain size , carbide , oxygen , grain boundary , phase (matter) , metallurgy , chemistry , composite number , organic chemistry
The new generation of silicon‐carbide‐based fibres made from organosilicon precursors, cross‐linked by electron irradiation, have been compared with the earlier fibres which have undergone cross‐linking in air. The latest fibres, known as Tyranno Lox‐E and Hi‐Nicalon, possess a lower oxygen content (≈5 wt% and ≈0.5 wt%) whereas the NLM202 fibres contain 12 wt% and the Tyranno Lox‐M 13 wt% of oxygen. The Tyranno fibres have been produced with a precursor similar to that used to produce the Nicalon fibres, but modified by the addition of titanium. All fibres possess a structure composed of β‐SiC grains, free carbon aggregates, with no crystallized titanium compounds in the Tyranno fibres and an oxygen‐rich intergranular phase, except in the Hi‐Nicalon fibre. The Hi‐Nicalon fibre has the largest grain size and its free carbon content is higher than in the NLM202 fibres. For all the fibres, the β‐SiC grains grow when the temperature increases, whilst the strengths and Young's moduli decrease. The NLM202 shows the least change in grain size and tensile properties. The Hi‐Nicalon is stiffer and stronger than the others at high temperature. TEM results show that grain growth is isotropic, even during creep tests. The growth depends on the nature and amount of the intergranular phase. Mechanical changes as a function of temperature can be explained by external oxidation during tensile tests in air and internal oxidation facilitated by the nanoporosity, which is greater in the Tyranno than in the Nicalon fibres. The presence of the oxygen‐rich phase in the three fibres containing the most oxygen decreases the creep resistance. Titanium does not improve the mechanical properties and the creep resistance beyond 1523 K and does not have any positive influence in limiting the SiC grain growth. Tyranno fibres are less well stabilized than the Nicalon fibres. The Hi‐Nicalon fibres have been shown to possess consistently better mechanical properties at all temperatures, including creep resistance, than the other fibres studied. All the fibres are sensitive to external oxidation at high temperature.