Effects of Texture and Silica Content on Crack Growth in Boron Nitrides

2020 
Boron nitride is used in applications such as crucibles for melting and casting glasses and metals, insulators for furnaces, molds for hot pressing, and neutron absorbers. Historically, various grades of hot pressed hexagonal boron nitride (BN) have been used. This study investigates the fracture toughness and slow crack growth parameters of several commercially available BN grades. Prior work revealed that some grades of BN absorb water and change strength, thus presenting a philosophical conundrum on crack growth test methods. The grades selected for this study are of interest because their available billet size is sufficient for large components, or because they have heritage in specific applications. Ultimately, the data will be used to perform material selection, system design and reliability analyses of components of interest. Boron nitrides exhibit limited slow crack growth in humidity, with an orientation dependence due to crystallographic texture: orientations with van der Waal bonds are insensitive to water whereas those with covalent bonds are sensitive. Fracture toughness is low, around that of glass, and is also a function of orientation (bond type), with fracture occurring more readily along van der Waal bonds between hexagonal BN platelets than at covalent bonds across platelets. Silica additions toughen BN, but increase slow crack growth susceptibility.
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