Author/Authors :
Bo He، نويسنده , , Fei Li، نويسنده , , Hong Zhou، نويسنده , , Yongbing Dai، نويسنده , ,
Baode Sun، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
The cracking failure of a conventional thermal
barrier coating (TBC), consisting of a near-a titanium
substrate, a NiCoCrAlY bond coat (BC), and a 8 wt.%
yttria-stabilized zirconia ceramic layer deposited by electron
beam-physical vapor deposition (EB-PVD) method,
was studied by cyclic furnace testing and isothermal
exposure. The scanning electron microscope, electron
probe microanalysis, and microhardness indentation were
used to probe the failure mechanism. It is found that due to
the mismatch of the coefficient of thermal expansion, the
as-deposited BC is suffered the long-term tensile creeping
at room temperature. During the high-temperature exposure,
the TBC locally rumples, bringing in-plane tensile
stress at the shoulders, and out-of-plane tensile stress at the
peak of the rumpled BC, where primal cracks are originated.
During the cooling period, the ridges of substrate
pulled by the local rumpling of the BC blocks the contracting
of the BC, originating new cracks in planar BC,
and aggravating the original cracks. Furthermore, the oxidation
products pushed into the BC and the 8YSZ enlarges
the TBC and cracks the substrate along the weakest diffused
grain boundaries. The cracking failure related to the
diffusion of the BC to the substrate is also discussed.