Author
Listed:
- Giorgio Sernicola
(Imperial College London)
- Tommaso Giovannini
(Imperial College London)
- Punit Patel
(University of Warwick)
- James R. Kermode
(University of Warwick)
- Daniel S. Balint
(Imperial College London)
- T. Ben Britton
(Imperial College London)
- Finn Giuliani
(Imperial College London
Imperial College London)
Abstract
Grain boundaries typically dominate fracture toughness, strength and slow crack growth in ceramics. To improve these properties through mechanistically informed grain boundary engineering, precise measurement of the mechanical properties of individual boundaries is essential, although it is rarely achieved due to the complexity of the task. Here we present an approach to characterize fracture energy at the lengthscale of individual grain boundaries and demonstrate this capability with measurement of the surface energy of silicon carbide single crystals. We perform experiments using an in situ scanning electron microscopy-based double cantilever beam test, thus enabling viewing and measurement of stable crack growth directly. These experiments correlate well with our density functional theory calculations of the surface energy of the same silicon carbide plane. Subsequently, we measure the fracture energy for a bi-crystal of silicon carbide, diffusion bonded with a thin glassy layer.
Suggested Citation
Giorgio Sernicola & Tommaso Giovannini & Punit Patel & James R. Kermode & Daniel S. Balint & T. Ben Britton & Finn Giuliani, 2017.
"In situ stable crack growth at the micron scale,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 8(1), pages 1-9, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:8:y:2017:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-017-00139-w
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-017-00139-w
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