Tl. Jessen et al., Effect of microstructure on the mechanical behavior of continuous-fiber-reinforced ceramic-matrix composites, J AM CERAM, 82(10), 1999, pp. 2753-2761
The mechanical behavior of a unidirectional continuous-fiber ceramic-matrix
composite (CFCMC) was correlated with matrix-rich channels in the microstr
ucture. A large population of CFCMCs was prepared via alkoxide infiltration
, which incorporated either uncoated Nicalon(TM) fibers (64 samples) or BN-
coated fibers (118 samples). No structure/property correlation was observed
for the uncoated composites, because of the uniformity of the microstructu
re, For the BN-coated composites, both the flexure strength and work of fra
cture (WOF) were correlated with oriented matrix-rich channels. The channel
s were <90 mu m wide and were distributed throughout the cross section. The
BN-coated CFCMCs exhibited laminate-like behavior: the strength was statis
tically higher when the channels were aligned parallel with the applied loa
d and the WOF was statistically higher when the channels were perpendicular
to the load. Grouping the specimens on the basis of channel orientation, r
elative to applied load, reduced the variance in strength and WOF. This cat
egorization also resulted in consistent, predictable failure behavior. This
observation implies that prior CFCMC data that do not consider microstruct
ure orientation may show wider scatter in mechanical behavior than is warra
nted.