TY - JOUR
T1 - Thermal Shock Damage and Failure Mechanism of 2D Laminated SiC/SiC with Barium-Strontium Aluminosilicate-Based Environmental Barrier Coating
AU - Cao, Xinxin
AU - Li, Jianzhang
AU - Han, Guifang
AU - Wang, Yulei
AU - Zhang, Ziqi
AU - Luan, Xingang
AU - Hong, Zhiliang
AU - Li, Aijun
AU - Cheng, Laifei
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Wiley-VCH GmbH.
PY - 2025/1
Y1 - 2025/1
N2 - Thermal shock damage is a key issue for the stable service of SiC/SiC with environmental barrier coating (EBC) in aero-engines. The thermal shock damage behavior of SiC/SiC with barium-strontium aluminosilicate (BSAS)-based EBC in an air atmosphere quenched by air and water media between RT and 1200 °C is systematically investigated. After 600 thermal shock cycles, cracks form in the EBC due to a sharp increase in the internal thermal stresses, and a SiO2 TGO layer is formed on the Si bonding coat. Based on the TGO thickness, damage within BSAS/mullite coatings is quantified by the oxygen permeability (2.541 × 10−11 mol·(atm cm s)−1), which is increased by 2.5 times compared to static oxidation. Despite cracking damage occurring in the SiC matrix of SiC/SiC substrates, the load-bearing capability of SiC fibers is improved due to the modulus matching of the fiber/matrix. Oxidation damage is dominated the degradation of the performance of SiC/SiC substrates, whose flexural strength is decreased by 15% after 600 cycles. In the thermal shock test quenched by water media, the strength retention of SiC/SiC-EBC is below 60%, and an increase in internal defects and even delamination of the SiC/SiC substrate are the main reasons for the thermal shock failure of SiC/SiC-EBC.
AB - Thermal shock damage is a key issue for the stable service of SiC/SiC with environmental barrier coating (EBC) in aero-engines. The thermal shock damage behavior of SiC/SiC with barium-strontium aluminosilicate (BSAS)-based EBC in an air atmosphere quenched by air and water media between RT and 1200 °C is systematically investigated. After 600 thermal shock cycles, cracks form in the EBC due to a sharp increase in the internal thermal stresses, and a SiO2 TGO layer is formed on the Si bonding coat. Based on the TGO thickness, damage within BSAS/mullite coatings is quantified by the oxygen permeability (2.541 × 10−11 mol·(atm cm s)−1), which is increased by 2.5 times compared to static oxidation. Despite cracking damage occurring in the SiC matrix of SiC/SiC substrates, the load-bearing capability of SiC fibers is improved due to the modulus matching of the fiber/matrix. Oxidation damage is dominated the degradation of the performance of SiC/SiC substrates, whose flexural strength is decreased by 15% after 600 cycles. In the thermal shock test quenched by water media, the strength retention of SiC/SiC-EBC is below 60%, and an increase in internal defects and even delamination of the SiC/SiC substrate are the main reasons for the thermal shock failure of SiC/SiC-EBC.
KW - damage and failure mechanism
KW - environmental barrier coatings
KW - oxidation
KW - SiC/SiC
KW - thermal shock behavior
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85210741708&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/adem.202401878
DO - 10.1002/adem.202401878
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85210741708
SN - 1438-1656
VL - 27
JO - Advanced Engineering Materials
JF - Advanced Engineering Materials
IS - 1
M1 - 2401878
ER -