Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1473674 | Journal of the European Ceramic Society | 2014 | 7 Pages |
The strength of ceramic materials is limited by flaws which are distributed in the volume or on the surface of the material. Commonly, fractographic investigations are performed after the strength tests to interpret the strength values.The relatively new Ball-on-Three Balls (B3B)-bending test applies a biaxial stress state (which is more searching for cracks than a uniaxial stress state) on the specimen. To identify typical fracture initiating flaws and to get a better understanding of the fracture behaviour of B3B-specimens a systematic fractographic investigation was performed on 260 silicon nitride specimens divided into batches with different surface qualities. It could be shown that in most cases (at least those in which origins could be clearly identified) surface or near surface located defects were responsible for failure. On specimens with poor surface qualities, surface defects were introduced through machining. On specimens with a better surface quality, volume defects, which were exposed on the surface by polishing, could be identified as fracture origins. In only a few cases defects in the bulk were fracture origins.