Mechanical Properties of Two Plain‐Woven Chemical Vapor Infiltrated Silicon Carbide‐Matrix Composites

2001 
The elastic and inelastic properties of a chemical vapor infiltrated (CVI) SiC matrix reinforced with either plain-woven carbon fibers (C/SiC) or SiC fibers (SiC/SiC) have been investigated. It has been investigated whether the mechanics of a plain weave can be described using the theory of a cross-ply laminate, because it enables a simple mechanics approach to the nonlinear mechanical behavior. The influences of interphase, fiber anisotropy, and porosity are included. The approach results in a reduction of the composite system to a fiber/matrix system with an interface. The tensile behavior is described by five damage stages. C/SiC can be modeled using one damage stage and a constant damage parameter. The tensile behavior of SiC/SiC undergoes four damage stages. Stiffness reduction due to transverse cracks in the transverse bundles is very different from cross-ply behavior. Compressive failure is initiated by interlaminar cracks between the fiber bundles. The crack path is dictated by the bundle waviness. For SiC/SiC, the compressive behavior is mostly linear to failure. C/SiC exhibits initial nonlinear behavior because of residual crack openings. Above the point where the cracks close, the compressive behavior is linear. Global compressive failure is characterized by a major crack oriented at a certain angle to the axial loading. In shear, the matrix cracks orientate in the principal tensile stress direction (i.e., 45° to the fiber direction) with very high crack densities before failure, but only SiC/SiC shows significant degradation in shear modulus. Hysteresis is observed during unloading/reloading sequences and increasing permanent strain.
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