2005
DOI: 10.2320/matertrans.46.543
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Evaluation of Tensile Properties of SiC/SiC Composites with Miniaturized Specimens

Abstract: Mechanical testing after neutron irradiation is a critical research tool for evaluating materials for fusion systems, such as silicon carbide fiber silicon carbide matrix (SiC/SiC) composites. However, single-axis tensile testing, which is required to build a fundamental database, requires large specimens. Therefore miniaturization of tensile test specimens has long been pursued as a method to reduce the irradiation volume to fit the capsule size limitation. The objective of this study is to identify specimen … Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Specimen size effect is a potential concern when testing these specimens. Considering the structural minimum unit width (or thickness) of the unidirectional composites is larger than the width (or thickness) of the mono fiber bundle (<1 mm), a very minor effect of specimen size on tensile properties, which depend on the axial fiber volume fraction, is expected in the size range of concern [17]. Indeed, no significant size effect was found in this study.…”
Section: Tensile Testcontrasting
confidence: 52%
“…Specimen size effect is a potential concern when testing these specimens. Considering the structural minimum unit width (or thickness) of the unidirectional composites is larger than the width (or thickness) of the mono fiber bundle (<1 mm), a very minor effect of specimen size on tensile properties, which depend on the axial fiber volume fraction, is expected in the size range of concern [17]. Indeed, no significant size effect was found in this study.…”
Section: Tensile Testcontrasting
confidence: 52%
“…Furthermore, the majority of PW specimens studied in literature exceed 2 mm in gauge thickness with an average ply thickness of ~0.25 mm, 12,27 which is over twice the gauge thickness of the planar CMCs studied here (~0.89 mm). It is suspected that gauge thickness below 1 mm would increase sensitivity to tow architecture or internal porosity/gap defects, which may reduce the ultimate strain of the CMCs 27,28 . Additionally, thin CMC samples and those with surface texture are prone to an increased percentage of dimensional measurement error, which would potentially reduce ultimate failure stress.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is suspected that gauge thickness below 1 mm would increase sensitivity to tow architecture or internal porosity/gap defects, which may reduce the ultimate strain of the CMCs. 27,28 Additionally, thin CMC samples and those with surface texture are prone to an increased percentage of dimensional measurement error, which would potentially reduce ultimate failure stress.…”
Section: Mechanical Propertiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Primarily for studying the neutron irradiation effects, small specimen test techniques (SSTT's) for room and elevated temperature tensile properties [71], in-plane shear strength [72], and transthickness tensile strength [73] have been developed in fusion SiC/SiC programs. Reliable tensile properties were obtained using specimens with typical dimensions of 40 · 4 · 2 mm 3 ; whereas the conventional tensile tests typically require >10 times larger specimen volume.…”
Section: Strength Of Compositesmentioning
confidence: 99%