Abstract

Tensile properties of a cross‐ply glass‐ceramic composite were investigated by conducting fracture, creep, and fatigue experiments at both room temperature and high temperatures in air. The composite consisted of a barium magnesium aluminosilicate (BMAS) glass‐ceramic matrix reinforced with SiC fibers with a SiC/BN coating. The material exhibited retention of most tensile properties up to 1200°C. Monotonic tensile fracture tests produced ultimate strengths of 230–300 MPa with failure strains of ∼1%, and no degradation in ultimate strength was observed at 1100° and 1200°C. In creep experiments at 1100°C, nominal steady‐state creep rates in the 10−9 s−1 range were established after a period of transient creep. Tensile stress rupture experiments at 1100° and 1200°C lasted longer than one year at stress levels above the corresponding proportional limit stresses for those temperatures. Tensile fatigue experiments were conducted in which the maximum applied stress was slightly greater than the proportional limit stress of the matrix, and, in these experiments, the composite survived 105 cycles without fracture at temperatures up to 1200°C. Microscopic damage mechanisms were investigated by TEM, and microstructural observations of tested samples were correlated with the mechanical response. The SiC/ BN fiber coatings effectively inhibited diffusion and reaction at the interface during high‐temperature testing. The BN layer also provided a weak interfacial bond that resulted in damage‐tolerant fracture behavior. However, oxidation of near‐surface SiC fibers occurred during prolonged exposure at high temperatures, and limited oxidation at fiber interfaces was observed when samples were dynamically loaded above the proportional limit stress, creating micro‐cracks along which oxygen could diffuse into the interior of the composite.

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