B4C/A1 offers a family of engineering materials in which a range of properties can be developed by postdensiflcation heat treatment. In applications where hardness and high modulus are required, heat treatment above 600°C provides a multiphase ceramic material containing only a small amount of residual metal. Heat treatment between 600° and 700°C produces mainly A1B2; 700° and 900°C results in a mixture of A1B2 and A14BC; 900° and 980°C produces primarily A14BC; and 1000° to 1050°C results in A1B24C4 with small amounts of A14C3 if the heating does not exceed 5 h. Deleterious A14C3 is avoided by processing below 1000°C. All of these phases tend to form large clusters of grains and result in lower strength regardless of which phase forms. Toughness is also reduced; the least determinal phase is A1B2. The highest hardness (88 Rockwell A) and Young's modulus (310 GPa) are obtained in Al4BC-rich samples. AlB2-containing samples exhibit lower hardness and Young's modulus but higher fracture toughness. While the modulus, Poisson's ratio, and hardness of multiphase B4C/A1 composites containing 5–10 vol% free metal are comparable to ceramics, the unique advantage of this family of materials is low density (>2.7 g/cm3) and higher than 7 MPa-m1/2 fracture toughness.
[1]
A. Pyzik,et al.
Rapid omnidirectional compaction (ROC) of powder
,
1989
.
[2]
A. Pyzik,et al.
Processing of boron carbide-aluminum composites
,
1989
.
[3]
I. Aksay,et al.
Microdesigning of B4C-A1 cermets
,
1989
.
[4]
T. Iseki,et al.
Some properties of sintered Al4C3
,
1983
.
[5]
R. Mattes,et al.
Zur Darstellung und Struktur eines aluminiumhaltigen Borcarbids
,
1970
.
[6]
H. Exner,et al.
A REVIEW OF PARAMETERS INFLUENCING SOME MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF TUNGSTEN CARBIDE–COBALT ALLOYS
,
1970
.
[7]
A. Perrotta,et al.
Crystal structure of C8Al2.1B51
,
1969
.
[8]
G. Will.
Die Kristallstruktur von C4AlB24
,
1969
.
[9]
J. Economy,et al.
Topotactic transition in C4AlB24
,
1966
.
[10]
A. Lipp,et al.
Über ein aluminiumhaltiges Borcarbid
,
1966
.
[11]
J. Economy,et al.
PRESENCE OF CARBON IN ALUMINUM BORIDES
,
1964
.
[12]
J. A. Kohn,et al.
AlB10, a new phase, and a critique on the aluminum borides
,
1959
.