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Fracture toughness in metal matrix composites

Abstract

Evaluations of the fracture toughness in metal matrix composites (Duralcan reinforced with 15% of Al(2)0(3) and SiC) are presented in this work. The application of Elastic Plastic Fracture Mechanics is discussed and the obtained values are compared with the ones obtained by means of Linear Elastic Fracture Mechanics. Results show that J IC derived K JC values are higher than the corresponding values obtained by direct application of the linear elastic methodology. The effect of a heat treatment on the material fracture toughness was also evaluated in which the analyzed approaches showed, not only different toughness values, but also opposite tendencies. A second comparison of the J IC and K JC values obtained in this work with toughness values reported in the literature is presented and discussed.

metal matrix composite; elastic plastic feature mechanics; feature toughness; experimental techniques


Fracture Toughness in Metal Matrix Composites

J.E. Perez Ipiñaa, A.A. Yawnyb*, R. Stukeb**, C. Gonzalez Oliverb***

aGrupo Mecánica de Fractura, U.N. Comahue/Conicet, Buenos Aires 1400, 8300 Neuquén, Argentina

bCentro Atómico Bariloche, CNEA, 8400 Bariloche, Argentina

e-mail: apipina @uncoma.edu.ar;

*yawny@cab.cnea.edu.ar;

**stuke@cab.cnea.edu.ar;

***gon@cab.cnea.edu.ar

Received: February 29, 2000; Revised: July 31, 2000

Evaluations of the fracture toughness in metal matrix composites (Duralcan reinforced with 15% of Al203 and SiC) are presented in this work. The application of Elastic Plastic Fracture Mechanics is discussed and the obtained values are compared with the ones obtained by means of Linear Elastic Fracture Mechanics. Results show that JIC derived KJC values are higher than the corresponding values obtained by direct application of the linear elastic methodology. The effect of a heat treatment on the material fracture toughness was also evaluated in which the analyzed approaches showed, not only different toughness values, but also opposite tendencies. A second comparison of the JIC and KJC values obtained in this work with toughness values reported in the literature is presented and discussed.

Keywords: metal matrix composite, elastic plastic feature mechanics, feature toughness, experimental techniques

1. Introduction

Metal matrix composites (MMC) are materials made from the dispersion of a ceramic phase, typically SiC or Al203 fibers or particles, in order to improve the mechanical and physical properties of the matrix. In the particular situation of Aluminum MMCs, both pure Al and alloys are employed. Continuous fibers (Continuous metal matrix composites CMMC) as well as short fibers and particles (Discontinuous Aluminum reinforced DAR) are employed.

The production and use of composite materials is under intensive development because of the interesting physical and mechanical properties that these materials present1-6 and also due to the possibility to manipulate them by means of the variation of the type and proportion of the reinforcement employed as well as the type of the metallic matrix. Materials with designed mechanical (yield stress, elastic modulus, etc) and physical (thermal expansion coefficient, resistivity, thermal conductivity, etc) properties can be produced in this way.

The specific yield stress that can be obtained in these materials make them very attractive for high temperature applications where the conventional heat treated alloys are useless as a consequence of the dissolution of the precipitates that give them good mechanical properties at moderate temperatures. However, the low fracture toughness that these materials exhibit remains as their major drawback. This problem has reduced its expansion in applications to structural uses. A great effort has been done on this field trying to understand the mechanisms that control the fracture process but, as a consequence of the complexity of the problem, not enough understanding has been achieved up to date.

Many works about fracture toughness in MMC are found in the literature, specially based in DAR of 6XXX and 2XXX Aluminum alloys reinforced with SiC or Al2O3 particles. One of the most studied materials is Duralcan from Alcan7 because it is produced in mass scale by a low cost industrial process. Most data found in the literature are expressed in terms of K, the linear elastic parameter. In the review of Mortensen8 a huge quantity of results obtained by application of linear elastic fracture mechanics is cited. They are based on the ASTM E-3999 procedure as well as on the measurement of the crack energy release rate GC10. Mortensen8 comments on the corresponding justifications and, in some cases also, on the limitations given by the use of procedures: that did not used a precrack induced by fatigue, that calculated K from maximum load values or that they used tests with chevron notches and /or short rod specimens11. Beck et al.12 also used the Equivalent Energy Method, following ASTM E99213. Most of the published results correspond to low toughness values.

Evaluations of fracture toughness of DURALCAN MMC are presented in this work. The applicability of elastic-plastic fracture mechanics is discussed. The obtained values are compared with the cited in the literature by application of linear elastic fracture mechanics. The incidence of a heat treatment on the fracture toughness is also discussed.

2. Material and Method

Two MMC materials provided by DURALCAN: Al6061 15%Al2O3 and Al-Si alloy 15%SiC were studied. The tests were made in the as received condition and, for two specimens, also with a heat treatment that consisted in annealing to 340 °C for 24 h with heating and cooling rates of 1 °C/min.

Compact tension specimens with a 1/2 inch thickness (1/2T-CT) were machined from round bars of 50 mm in diameter. Table 1 shows the specimens dimensions.

Table 1.

Fatigue precracks were grown by means of application of variable load cycles in a servo-hydraulic MTS-810 machine under displacement control, with frequencies between 10 to 30 Hz. Chevron notches were used in some specimens in order to enhance the initiation of the fatigue crack.

The tests were made also in the MTS-810 machine, using displacement control with a load point displacement rate of 0.1 mm/min. Load vs. Load point displacement (P vs. d) and amplified Load vs. mouth opening displacement (P vs. V) plots were obtained. The last one was obtained only during the partial unloadings (more than 20 in each specimen). In this way the unloading compliance method was employed.

The tests were made at room temperature and, in some cases for Duralcan reinforced with Al2O3, at a higher temperature, near 50 °C.

Values of JIC and J-R were obtained following the ASTM E-813:8914 and ASTM E:1152:8915 standards. From the obtained JIC, the equivalent K, KJC, were calculated by means of the following equation, given by the standard

(1)

KPmax values were also calculated using the equations given by ASTM E-3999, with the initial dimensions of the specimens and the maximum load values.

Fractographic analysis were made to characterize the fracture mode.

3. Results

The necessary precracking loads to initiate and propagate the cracks where high (in some cases higher than 70% of the maximum load of the fracture test). With lower loads the cracks did not grow.

Figure 1 shows a P vs. d record corresponding to specimen Dur21 while Fig. 2 shows the P vs. V records of the partial unloadings of the same specimen. On the other hand, an R-Curve J-da corresponding to the specimen Dur2 can be seen in Fig. 3. All the tested specimens showed similar records. These figures undoubtedly confirm the existence of an elastic-plastic behavior in these materials.

Figure 1.
Load vs. load point displacement (P vs. d) record for specimen Dur 21.
Figure 2.
Amplified load vs. mouth opening displacement (P vs.V) records corresponding to the partial unloadings shown in the P vs. d plot (Fig. 1) for specimen Dur 21.
Figure 3.
Crack growh resistance curve J - da for specimen Dur 2.

Table 1 shows all the obtained results.

Figure 4 shows a fractography of a tested specimen where ductile mechanisms are clearly seen.

Figure 4.
SEM fractography of Dur 23 specimen.

4. Discussion

The feasibility of fatigue precracking was proved. The fatigue precrack observation was only possible with very careful polished surface.

The Chevron notches used in some specimens to enhance the initiation of the fatigue crack did not proved to be useful.

The process of growing fatigue precracks in these materials is often cited as difficult8, moreover, it was also proposed the use of acute nochtes (30-50 mm)16 instead of fatigue precracks. In coincidence with other researchers12,17, we consider that, in spite of not having done comparative experiments between fatigue precracked specimens and notched ones, the standardized methods must be followed. The equipment and techniques normally available in a fracture mechanics laboratory are sufficient to fatigue precrack the MMC fracture toughness specimens.

Many data found in the literature are expressed in terms of K, the linear elastic parameter. In his excellent review, Mortensen8 cites a huge quantity of results obtained by application of Linear Elastic fracture mechanics, using more or less strictly the ASTM E-399 procedure, as well as measuring GC10 and afterwards calculating K. Mortensen also mentions the corresponding justifications (and in some cases the limitations) given by the use of these procedures without fatigue precracking and with the calculation of K from maximum load values, as well as tests with chevron notches and/or short rod specimens11. Beck et al.12 also used, besides ASTM E399 standard, the Equivalent Energy Method, following ASTM E99213, but both values did not appreciably differ.

It must be considered that when the specimen shows non-linearity in the load-displacement record, it can be as a consequence of plastic deformation or any other mechanism present near the crack tip, non-linear material s - e behavior, stable crack growth or any combination between them. The KIC value measured in this way is not representative of the fracture toughness because the condition for the Stress Intensity Factor to describe the stress and strain fields near the crack tip (linear relation between stress and strain and small scale yielding) have been violated18. An elastic plastic or an R-curve methodology is then needed to be applied for the analysis.

As it can be seen in Fig. 1, the fracture toughness tests have shown unquestionably an elastic plastic behavior with ductile growing mechanism. As a consequence, we decided to use J-R curves and JIC determinations. Ductile mechanisms in both materials were observed (Fig. 4).

By obvious reasons, it is of great interest to make a comparative analysis with the corresponding values cited in the literature, generally given in terms of K. In the cases of the non-linear behavior found in our tests, JIC can be determined and then translated to K values by means of Eq. (1). These values are shown in Table 1, as well as the ones corresponding to maximum load values. As an example, the specimen Dur1 is analyzed. For E = 100 GPa, an equivalent KJC of about 52.0 MPa is obtained, while K taken from maximum load value is KPmax = 14.8 MPa . This last value is the one that is cited as fracture toughness in some papers.

Some experimental difficulties are argued in order to determine elastic plastic parameters or R-Curves, that the stable crack growth initiation is near the maximum load point, and also that KPmax is measured to use the values only comparatively, although it was not the real fracture toughness of the material. It is very important to discuss this point profoundly because the MMC materials are considered materials with brittle behavior. This is not true, at least for the materials tested in this work, as it can be seen in the records, the R-curves and in Table 1. In some specimens deformation occurred producing slow stable crack growth beyond 40% of the initial remaining ligament without any instability. This is in some way contradictory with the values given by many authors8,11,12, but we consider that it is because they have used some kind of linear elastic fracture mechanics instead of the elastic plastic.

All the specimens with a heat treatment consisting in heating until 340 °C with rates of 1 °C/h have shown a very important increasing in the JIC values. When the tendency was analyzed in terms of KPmax, it was the opposite: the specimens with the heat treatment showed lower KPmax values.

We consider very important to emphasize here that the measurement of maximum load values could lead to absolutely wrong conclusions when tendencies due to microstructure changes are analyzed. In Table 1 it can be observed that a heat treatment increases the material fracture toughness (50% increase in JIC and 25% increase in KJC), while the same tests analyzed by maximum load parameters (Kpmax) indicate a small decrease in the toughness values. The application of linear elastic criteria could then induce to the wrong conclusion that an annealing treatment could decrease the fracture toughness.

The tests done at a temperature higher than room temperature (48 °C) in DURALCAN reinforced with Al2O3 did not show significant variations in fracture toughness. This could be masked due to the normal scatter in fracture toughness that this kind of materials presents.

5. Conclusions

a) Linear elastic fracture mechanics is not considered to be adequate to the type of materials that have been tested because they showed important non-linearities due to plastic deformation and stable crack growth.

b) Elastic plastic fracture mechanics is considered as the methodology to be applied. In this work J criterion was employed.

c) The KIC values estimated from the values of JIC are considerably higher than many K values reported in the literature for similar materials. This discrepancy could be imputed to the different experimental procedures to measure the fracture toughness (elastic plastic or linear elastic fracture mechanics). When linear elastic fracture mechanics was employed in our materials, the KPmax values obtained were comparable to the ones reported in the literature.

d) We consider that the procedure normally employed by many authors of measuring KPmax, in spite of its simplicity, is not adequate and give very low fracture toughness values.

e) We have found an inverse tendency in the KPmax variation compared with the tendency in JIC when microstructural changes are analyzed. This could induce to wrong conclusions about the convenience of performing heat treatments.

f) The annealing heat treatments done in this work promoted an important increase in fracture toughness.

g) The fatigue precracking was possible and it resulted to be relatively simple, but the necessary loads to initiate and grow the cracks were considered high.

h) The JIC values measured at temperatures near 50 °C did not show significant differences with respect to the room temperature ones.

Acknowledgments

To Guillermina Urretavizcaya for the experimental collaboration, to Dr. Boyd for the comments and to DURALCAN that supplied the material. This work was supported by Proyecto PID-BID 480 / SECYT-CONICET, and PIA 6376/96 / CONICET.

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    17 Nov 2000
  • Date of issue
    July 2000

History

  • Received
    29 Feb 2000
  • Accepted
    31 July 2000
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