Abstract

The aim of this work is to investigate the thermal conversion of carbon fibres/polysiloxane composites to carbon fibres/ceramic composites. The conversion mechanism of four different resins to the ceramic phase in the presence of carbon fibres is investigated. The experiments were conducted in three temperature ranges, corresponding to composite manufacturing stages, namely up to 160 °C, 1000 °C and finally 1700 °C. The study reveals that the thermal conversion mechanism of pure resins in the presence of carbon fibres is similar to that without fibres up to 1000 °C. Above 1000 °C thermal decomposition occurs in both solid (composite matrix) and gas phases, and the presence of carbon fibres in resin matrix produces higher mass losses and higher porosity of the resulting composite samples in comparison to ceramic residue obtained from pure resin samples. XRD analysis shows that at temperature of 1700 °C composite matrices contain nanosized silicon carbide. SEM and EDS analyses indicate that due to the secondary decomposition of gaseous compounds released during pyrolysis a silicon carbide protective layer is created on the fibre surface and fibre–matrix interface. Moreover, nanosized silicon carbide filaments crystallize in composite pores. Owing to the presence of the protective silicon carbide layer created from the gas phase on the fibre–matrix interface, highly porous C/SiC composites show significantly high oxidation resistance.

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