화학공학소재연구정보센터
Nature Materials, Vol.12, No.1, 40-46, 2013
Real-time quantitative imaging of failure events in materials under load at temperatures above 1,600 degrees C
Ceramic matrix composites are the emerging material of choice for structures that will see temperatures above similar to 1,500 degrees C in hostile environments, as for example in next-generation gas turbines and hypersonic-flight applications. The safe operation of applications depends on how small cracks forming inside the material are restrained by its microstructure. As with natural tissue such as bone and seashells, the tailored microstructural complexity of ceramic matrix composites imparts them with mechanical toughness, which is essential to avoiding failure. Yet gathering three-dimensional observations of damage evolution in extreme environments has been a challenge. Using synchrotron X-ray computed microtomography, we have fully resolved sequences of microcrack damage as cracks grow under load at temperatures up to 1,750 degrees C. Our observations are key ingredients for the high-fidelity simulations used to compute failure risks under extreme operating conditions.