Toughening of Layered Ceramic Composites with Residual Surface Compression

Effects of macroscopic residual stresses on fracture toughness of multilayered ceramic laminates were studied analytically and experimentally. Stress intensities for edge cracks in three-layer, single-edge-notch-bend (SENB) specimens with stepwise varying residual stresses in the absence of the crack and superimposed bending were calculated as a function of the crack length by the method of weight function. The selected weight function and the method of calculation were validated by calculating stress intensities for edge cracks in SENB specimens without the residual stresses and obtaining agreement with the stress-intensity equation recommended in ASTM Standard E-399. The stress-intensity calculations for the three-layer laminates with the macroscopic residual stresses were used to define an apparent fracture toughness. The theoretical predictions of the apparent fracture toughness were verified by experiments on three-layer SENB specimens of polycrystalline alumina with 15 vol% of unstabilized zirconia dispersed in the outer layers and 15 vol% of fully stabilized zirconia dispersed in the inner layer. A residual compression of ∼400 MPa developed in the outer layers by the constrained transformation of the unstabilized zirconia from the tetragonal to the monoclinic phase enhanced the apparent fracture toughness to values of 30 MPa.m1/2 in a system where the intrinsic fracture toughness was only 5 to 7 MPa.m1/2.

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