DISSERTATION

Graphene NanoPlatelets Reinforced Tantalum Carbide consolidated by Spark Plasma Sintering

Abstract

Hypersonic aerospace vehicles are severely limited by the lack of adequate high temperature materials that can withstand the harsh hypersonic environment. Tantalum carbide (TaC), with a melting point of 3880°C, is an ultrahigh temperature ceramic (UHTC) with potential applications such as scramjet engines, leading edges, and zero erosion nozzles. However, consolidation of TaC to a dense structure and its low fracture toughness are major challenges that make it currently unviable for hypersonic applications. In this study, Graphene NanoPlatelets (GNP) reinforced TaC composites are synthesized by spark plasma sintering (SPS) at extreme conditions of 1850˚C and 80-100 MPa. The addition of GNP improves densification and enhances fracture toughness of TaC by up to ~100% through mechanisms such as GNP bending, sliding, pull-out, grain wrapping, crack bridging, and crack deflection. Also, TaC-GNP composites display improved oxidation behavior over TaC when exposed to a high temperature plasma flow exceeding 2500 ˚C.

Keywords:
Materials science Spark plasma sintering Tantalum carbide Ceramic Fracture toughness Composite material Consolidation (business) Carbide Toughness Tantalum Hypersonic flight Sintering Hypersonic speed Metallurgy Aerospace engineering

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Citation History

Topics

Diamond and Carbon-based Materials Research
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Materials Chemistry
Advanced ceramic materials synthesis
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Ceramics and Composites
Energetic Materials and Combustion
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Mechanics of Materials
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