Microstructures and properties of Mo5Si3-particle-reinforced Si3N4-matrix composites

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作者
Iizuka, Tateoki [1 ,2 ]
Murao, Toshihiro [1 ]
Yamamoto, Hiroyuki [1 ]
Kita, Hideki [1 ]
机构
[1] Isuzu Advanced Engineering Center, Ltd., Fujisawa-shi, Kanagawa-ken 252-8501, Japan
[2] American Ceramic Society, United States
来源
| 1600年 / Blackwell Publishing Inc.卷 / 85期
关键词
Bending strength - Fracture toughness - Grain boundaries - Microstructure - Molybdenum compounds - Porous materials - Reinforcement - Silicon nitride - Sintering - Thermal expansion;
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摘要
Mo5Si3-particle-reinforced Si3N4-matrix composites were fabricated by sintering molybdenum-solution-infiltrated porous Si3N4. Fine Mo5Si3 particles, with an average diameter of ∼0.13-0.17 μm, grew in situ from the reaction between MoOs and Si3N4 in the grain boundary of the Si3N4. The Mo5Si3 particles resided in the grain-boundary glassy phase and reinforced the grain boundaries. The four-point flexural strength and fracture toughness of a 2.8 wt% Mo5Si3-Si3N4 composite were 1060 MPa and 7.7 MPam1/2, respectively. This was higher than those for normally sintered Si3N4 by ∼17% and ∼18%, respectively. The fracture toughness of the Mo5Si3-Si3N4 composite increased as the content of Mo5Si3 particles increased, but the flexural strength decreased. Improvement in fracture toughness was attributed to a thermal expansion mismatch among the Mo5Si3, the Si3N4, and the grain-boundary amorphous phases in the Mo5Si3-Si3N4 composites. Another reason for the improved fracture toughness was the pullout of elongated Si2N2O grains that formed as a result of oxygen gas released from the reaction between the molybdenum-solution-obtained MoO3 and the Si3N4. The infiltration method for incorporating desired elements or compounds into a ceramic matrix holds promise as a process for fabricating submicrometer- or nanometer-sized composites with high strength and high fracture toughness.
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