Carbon-fibre-reinforced-carbon (aka “carbon-carbon” or “C/C”) is a leading, tough, low-density material that has been extensively used for these applications. Despite its many advantages, C/C does suffer from being susceptible to oxidization, and must therefore be coated with some protective layer prior to use. The residual and thermally-induced strains between C/C and its protective coatings must be understood in order to engineer safer, lighter vehicles.
As reported in a new article[1], researchers from the Australian Dept. of Defense (DST Group, Aerospace Division), lead by first author John Thornton, have used high energy x-rays at CHESS to map depth-dependent phase and strain in several samples of C/C which have been coated with sodium silicate glass and silicon carbide. They investigated both “pristine” samples, as well as samples which had been blasted using an oxy-acetylene torch to simulate operating conditions. Mismatch in thermal contraction of coating and C/C results in through-thickness cracks of the SiC layer which must be filled using sodium silicate glass. The degree of oxidation of the coating was shown to effectively tune this strain mismatch, as was the degree to which the interface is compositionally graded. The detailed understanding of the strains present in each phase, as a function of depth, allowed Thornton and colleagues to propose ways to improve oxidation resistance in the future, by introducing a composition-graded buffer layer of graphite between the C/C and the SiC. This should reduce the tensile strain, and thus also reduce the density of through thickness cracks.
Reference:
[1] John Thornton, Darren Dale, Jacob Ruff, and Chris Wood, “Phase and strain mapping of a protective coating on carbon–carbon,” Surface and Coatings Technology, Volume 287, (2016).