Abstract

BN interphases were synthesized by chemical vapour infiltration (CVI) from BCl3 and NH3 at 900 °C and 1200 °C within preforms made of a single 2D woven SiC fibre ply. Then CVI of a SiC matrix followed by molten silicon infiltration resulted in laboratory-made single-ply SiC/SiC-Si composites representative of similar industrial ceramic matrix composites. The interphases and interfaces were characterized by transmission electron microscopy. It has been found that, in the two cases, the interphases are mostly turbostratic BN. Those synthesized at 900 °C are very poorly crystallized and exhibit a quasi-isotropic microstructure. An equiaxed interlayer is obtained prior to the columnar CVI growth of SiC matrix. Interphases synthesized at 1200 °C exhibit high degrees of crystallization and structural anisotropy. The SiC matrix grows directly in columns on BN. For interphase thicknesses of 300 nm and more, triangular-shaped crystallites of rhombohedral BN appear in turbostratic BN and the columnar growth of SiC is disoriented.

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