Abstract
Evaporation of paraffin and ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethylene admixed with alumina powder for the slip casting and sintering process allowed the obtainment of segmented porous alumina ceramics with 50% total porosity, whose deformation behavior we studied. Structurally, these ceramic materials were composed of large and small pores, and a system of discontinuities subdividing the samples into segments. Using digital image correlation (DIC), strain distribution maps were obtained that allowed the observation of strain localization zones, where primary cracks propagated along the interblock discontinuities. Two stages were revealed to be responsible for different mechanisms that provided the sample with damage tolerance under compression loading: the first stage was crack propagation along the block boundaries, which was followed by the second stage of microcracking and fragmentation, consisting of filling of the free spaces with fragments, compaction band generation, and stabilization of the crack. Both stages comprise a cycle that is repeated again and again until the full volume of the sample is occupied by the compaction bands.
Subject
General Materials Science
Cited by
4 articles.
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