Silicon-carbide-based ceramics are promising materials for applications in gas turbine components, heat exchangers, and wear-resistant components. Most of these applications require good strength and toughness, high thermal conductivity and good environmental stability at high temperature. Although silicon carbide can fulfill all these requirements, one major problem is that SiC hardly densifies without additives, because of the covalent nature of Si-C bonding and the low self-diffusion coefficient. In the last decade, liquid-phase sintering has been widely studied as a viable process for obtaining dense and fine materials without excessively high temperatures and pressures. [1][2][3][4][5][6] Materials with improved sinterability and room-temperature strength (∼700 MPa) were obtained by careful optimization of the processing, sintering additives and sintering cycles. [3,7] However, the major problems encountered with this class of liquid-phase-sintered materials are the low fracture toughness and the degradation of strength at high temperature. The relatively low toughness (3 MPa·m 0.5 , [4]