102 research outputs found

    Matrix plasticity in SiC/Ti-15-3 composite

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    An experimental method is described which allows for the observation of slip bands due to matrix plasticity in the SiC/Ti-15-3 composite system. A post-test heat treatment and subsequent chemical etch is employed to reveal slip bands in the titanium matrix. Composite specimens of various laminates were examined after tensile testing at room temperature. This method definitively shows that matrix plasticity has occurred in all the laminates investigated and at load/strain levels which were insufficient to cause fiber breakage

    Low cycle fatigue behavior of polycrystalline NiAl at 300 and 1000 K

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    The low cycle fatigue behavior of polycrystalline NiAl was determined at 300 and 1000 K - temperatures below and above the brittle- to-ductile transition temperature (BDTT). Fully reversed, plastic strain-controlled fatigue tests were conducted on two differently fabricated alloy samples: hot isostatically pressed (HIP'ed) prealloyed powder and hot extruded castings. HIP'ed powder (HP) samples were tested only at 1000 K, whereas the more ductile cast-and-extruded (C+E) NiAl samples were tested at both 1000 and 300 K. Plastic strain ranges of 0.06 to 0.2 percent were used. The C+E NiAl cyclically hardened until fracture, reaching stress levels approximately 60 percent greater than the ultimate tensile strength of the alloy. Compared on a strain basis, NiAl had a much longer fatigue life than other B2 ordered compounds in which fracture initiated at processing-related defects. These defects controlled fatigue life at 300 K, with fracture occurring rapidly once a critical stress level was reached. At 1000 K, above the BDTT, both the C+E and HP samples cyclically softened during most of the fatigue tests in air and were insensitive to processing defects. The processing method did not have a major effect on fatigue life; the lives of the HP samples were about a factor of three shorter than the C+E NiAl, but this was attributed to the lower stress response of the C+E material. The C+E NiAl underwent dynamic grain growth, whereas the HP material maintained a constant grain size during testing. In both materials, fatigue life was controlled by intergranular cavitation and creep processes, which led to fatigue crack growth that was primarily intergranular in nature. Final fracture by overload was transgranular in nature. Also, HP samples tested in vacuum had a life three times longer than their counterparts tested in air and, in contrast to those tested in air, hardened continuously over half of the sample life, thereby indicating an environmentally assisted fatigue damage mechanism. The C+E samples were tested only in air. At 1000 K, NiAl exhibited a superior fatigue life when compared to most superalloys on a plastic strain basis, but was inferior to most superalloys on a stress basis

    Optimum interface properties for metal matrix composites

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    Due to the thermal expansion coefficient mismatch (CTE) between the fiber and the matrix, high residual sresses exist in metal matrix composite systems upon cool down from processing temperature to room temperature. An interface material can be placed between the fiber and the matrix to reduce the high tensile residual stresses in the matrix. A computer program was written to minimize the residual stress in the matrix subject to the interface material properties. The decision variables are the interface modulus, thickness and thermal expansion coefficient. The properties of the interface material are optimized such that the average distortion energy in the matrix and the interface is minimized. As a result, the only active variable is the thermal expansion coefficient. The optimum modulus of the interface is always the minimum allowable value and the interface thickness is always the maximum allowable value, independent of the fiber/matrix system. The optimum interface thermal expansion coefficient is always between the values of the fiber and the matrix. Using this analysis, a survey of materials was conducted for use as fiber coatings in some specific composite systems

    Tensile deformation damage in SiC reinforced Ti-15V-3Cr-3Al-3Sn

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    The damage mechanisms of a laminated, continuous SiC fiber reinforced Ti-15V-3Cr-3Al-3Sn (Ti-15-3) composite were investigated. Specimens consisting of unidirectional as well as cross-ply laminates were pulled in tension to failure at room temperature and 427 C and subsequently examined metallographically. Selected specimens were interrupted at various strain increments and examined to document the development of damage. When possible, a micromechanical stress analysis was performed to aid in the explanation of the observed damage. The analyses provide average constituent microstresses and laminate stresses and strains. It was found that the damage states were dependent upon the fiber architecture

    Effect of heat treatment on stiffness and damping of SiC/Ti-15-3

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    The effect of heat treatment on material properties of SiC/Ti-15-3 was measured by vibration tests. Heat treatment changes the microstructure, which was found to stiffen the matrix and reduce its damping capacity. Test results indicate how these changes in the matrix affect the corresponding properties of the composite. Measurements show that heat treatment affects damping properties of the composite to a greater extent than stiffness properties. The extent of change in mechanical properties is shown to depend on heat treatment temperature and exposure time

    Evaluation of thermal and mechanical loading effects on the structural behavior of a SiC/titanium composite

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    Composite specimens of titanium-15-3 matrix reinforced with continuous SCS-6 silicon carbide fibers were tested under a variety of thermal and mechanical loadings. A combined experimental/finite element approach was used to estimate the effective in-situ modulus of the matrix material and to evaluate changes in modulus due to the applied loads. Several fiber orientations were tested. Results indicate that the effect of the thermal loads on composite stiffness varies with fiber orientation. Applications of this method to test specimens damaged by uniaxial tension, thermal cycling, and isothermal fatigue loadings are used to illustrate that by monitoring overall structural behavior, changes in stiffness caused by thermomechanical loading can be detected

    Properties of 5052 Aluminum For Use as Honeycomb Core in Manned Spaceflight

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    This work explains that the properties of Al 5052 material used commonly for honeycomb cores in sandwich panels are highly dependent on the tempering condition. It has not been common to specify the temper when ordering HC material nor is it common for the supplier to state what the temper is. For aerospace uses, a temper of H38 or H39 is probably recommended. This temper should be stated in the bill of material and should be verified upon receipt of the core. To this end some properties provided herein can aid as benchmark values

    Heat treatment study of the SiC/Ti-15-3 composite system

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    The oxidation and aging behaviors of a continuous fiber SiC/Ti-15V-3Cr-3Sn-3Al composite (SiC/Ti-15-3) were investigated. The aging characteristic of the composite were compared with those of the unreinforced Ti-15-3 matrix material, which was processed in the same manner as the composite. Various age hardened conditions of both the unreinforced matrix and the composite were evaluated by using optical microscopy, hardness measurements, and room temperature tensile tests (unreinforced matrix only). The Ti-15-3 material formed a thick surface oxide at temperature at or above 550 C when heat treated in air. The in situ composite matrix was softer than the unreinforced matrix for equivalent aging conditions. Both materials hardened to a maximum, then softened during overaging. The temperature at which peak aging occurred was approx. 450 C for both the in situ composite matrix and the unreinforced matrix. The room temperature elastic modulus and ultimate tensile strength of the unreinforced matrix varied as a function of aging treatment and paralleled the hardness behavior. The modulus and tensile strength showed little response to aging up to temperatures of 300 C; however, these properties increased after aging at 550 C. Aging at temperatures above 550 C resulted in a decrease in the modulus and tensile strength. The failure strain was a function of the precipitation state and of the amount of oxidation resulting from the heat treatment. Aging in air at the higher temperatures (greater than 550 C) caused the formation of a thick oxide layer and reduced the ductility. Aging in vacuum at these temperatures resulted in significantly higher ductilities. Long term exposures at 700 C caused the formation of a large grain boundary alpha-phase which reduced the ductility, even though the specimens were heat treated in vacuum

    Experimental and analytical analysis of stress-strain behavior in a (90/0 deg)2s, SiC/Ti-15-3 laminate

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    The nonlinear stress strain behavior of 90 degree/0 degree sub 2s, SiC/Ti-15-3 composite laminate was numerically investigated with a finite element, unit cell approach. Tensile stress-strain curves from room temperature experiments depicted three distinct regions of deformation, and these regions were predicted by finite element analysis. The first region of behavior, which was linear elastic, occurred at low applied stresses. As applied stresses increased, fiber/matrix debonding in the 90 degree plies caused a break in the stress-strain curve and initiated a second linear region. In this second region, matrix plasticity in the 90 degree plies developed. The third region, which was typified by nonlinear, stress-strain behavior occr red at high stresses. In this region, the onset of matrix plasticity in the 0 degree plies stiffened the laminate in the direction transverse to the applied load. Metallographic sections confirmed the existence of matrix plasticity in specific areas of the structure. Finite element analysis also predicted these locations of matrix slip

    As-received microstructure of a SiC/Ti-15-3 composite

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    A silicon carbide fiber reinforced titanium (Ti-15V-3Cr-3Sn-3Al) composite is metallographically examined. Several methods for examining composite materials are investigated and documented. Polishing techniques for this material are described. An interference layering method is developed to reveal the structure of the fiber, the reaction zone, and various phases within the matrix. Microprobe and transmission electron microscope (TEM) analyses are performed on the fiber/matrix interface. A detailed description of the fiber distribution as well as the microstructure of the fiber and matrix are presented
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