Abstract

The compressive creep behavior of monolithic mullite and a composite made of mullite reinforced by 40 vol% SiC fiber were investigated at temperatures from 1100 to 1200°C and under stresses from 5 to 55 MPa in air with a loading direction parallel and perpendicular to the fiber direction. For both situations the composite exhibits better creep resistance than monolithic mullite, although there is a creep anisotropy. The improvement in creep resistance when the fibers are parallel to the loading directions is due to the shedding of the applied stress on the SiC fibers, and the improvement in creep resistance when the fibers are perpendicular to the loading direction occurs because the fibers inhibit the lateral deformation of the mullite matrix along the fibers. The improvement mechanisms of the composites were confirmed further by their creep-recovery study, which indicated that the two types of composite specimens exhibit both an apparent creep-recovery behavior on load removal, due to the relaxation of the residual stress state between the mullite matrix and the SiC fibers after unloading. ©

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