Failure Modes of a Unidirectional Ultra-High-Modulus Carbon-Fiber/Carbon-Matrix Composite

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Abstract:

The objective of this study was to observe the effects of various microstructural features on the in situ, room-temperature tensile fracture behavior of an ultra-high-modulus, unidirectional carboncarbon CC composite as a function of processing heat-treatment temperature HTT over the range of 1100 deg C to 2750 deg C. An in situ SEM flexural stage was used to observe the interactions between the advancing crack tip and the microstructural features in the frontal process zone. Following the lowest HTT of 1100 deg C, failure is dominated by the well-bounded brittle matrix a tortuous crack path in the E130 fibers appears to contribute to a relatively high utilization of fiber strength in spite of this brittle-matrix failure. Approximate calculations of the interfacial shear stress that might be generated by matrix shrinkage during pyrolysis of the polymer to carbon were compared to approximations of crack-tip interfacial shear stresses IFSS using the Cook-Gordon approach. The results suggest that the strong bonding in the 1100 deg C HTT composite cannot be accounted for by friction alone, and, therefore, chemical bonding or some type of fiber-matrix mechanical interlocking must be involved. Higher HHTs lead to progressive weakening of the fiber-matrix interface, and, with heat treatment to 2150 deg C, multiple matrix cracking MMC is observed. Using the crack-spacing model of Aveston, Cooper, and Kelly ACK, an IFSS of 1 MPa is estimated for the MMC case. Attempts to calculate the matrix failure strain using the ACK formulation led to a large overprediction of the failure strain, although a number of the parameters used in the calculation are known only very approximately. Heat treatments to 2400 deg C and 2750 deg C led to longitudinal intramatrix cohesive failure at 2750 deg C, this damage is extensive and results in composites with strength utilizations approaching those of dry fiber bundles.

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