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C-Sphere Strength-Size Scaling in a Bearing-Grade Silicon Nitride...

by Andrew A Wereszczak, Osama Jadaan, Timothy P Kirkland, Kevin T Strong, Gregory J Champoux
Publication Type
Conference Paper
Publication Date
Page Numbers
507 to 511
Conference Name
International Symposium on New Frontier of Advanced Si-Based Ceramics and Composites
Conference Location
Jeju, South Korea
Conference Date
-

A �C-sphere� specimen geometry was used to determine the failure strength distributions of a commercially available bearing-grade silicon nitride (Si3N4) having ball diameters of 12.7 and 25.4 mm. Strengths for both diameters were determined using the combination of failure load, C sphere geometry, and finite element analysis and fitted using two-parameter Weibull distributions. Effective areas of both diameters were estimated as a function of Weibull modulus and used to explore whether the strength distributions predictably strength-scaled between each size. They did not. That statistical observation suggested that the same flaw type did not limit the strength of both ball diameters indicating a lack of material homogeneity between the two sizes. Optical fractography confirmed that. It showed there were two distinct strength-limiting flaw types in both ball diameters, that one flaw type was always associated with lower strength specimens, and that significantly higher fraction of the 24.5-mm-diameter c-sphere specimens failed from it. Predictable strength-size-scaling would therefore not result as a consequence of this because these flaw types were not homogenously distributed and sampled in both c-sphere geometries.