Journal of Materials Science, Vol.32, No.6, 1473-1477, 1997
A New Method of Fracture-Toughness Determination in Brittle Ceramics by Open-Crack Shape-Analysis
Improvement of the fracture toughness of high-quality ceramics remains one of the most important goals in materials development. An associated problem is the accurate measurement of fracture toughness in such brittle or semi-brittle ceramics, particularly in small samples encountered in material development. Previously used methods relying on measurement of the size of fracture mirrors, the indentation load and crack length in Vickers hardness-induced cracking, and a variant of similar techniques, have all been less than satisfactory in discriminating quantitative differences among materials. A hitherto unused technique of inferring the fracture toughness in samples from measurements of open-crack flank displacements, which we have developed, avoids most of the theoretical and experimental difficulties of other methods. While it is somewhat intensive in terms of evaluation and requires high resolution of open cracks, the technique is fundamentally the soundest of all techniques and is capable of furnishing discriminating results. We present results of its application to the measurement of some model materials such as soda-lime glass, single-crystal silicon, alumina, and a reaction-bonded silicon nitride whose porosity would ordinarily present difficulties with other methods.
Keywords:INDENTATION