Journal of the American Ceramic Society, Vol.84, No.1, 104-110, 2001
Thermal shock of layered ceramic structures with crack-deflecting interfaces
In this paper the influence of crack-deflecting interlayers on the thermal shock behavior of a ceramic body has been studied. It is observed that the presence of such interlayers inhibits the penetration of cracks into the body and that the magnitude of this effect is much greater than that of internal stresses or of possible increases in fracture energy of the layers, because cracking occurs in a manner different from that expected. A finite difference model has been used to estimate the temperature distribution in the body, from which the crack driving force and its variation with time and penetration into the body have been calculated. It is shown that these observations are consistent with quantitative predictions, if continued crack growth in the laminate requires that the stress in the outermost intact layer is equal to the failure strength of that layer, rather than the crack driving force for the overall penetrating crack being equal to the fracture energy of the material.