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INFUENCE OF SPECIMEN TYPE AND LOADING CONFIGURATION ON THE FRACTURE STRENGTH OF SiC LAYER IN COATED PARTICLE FUEL...

by Thak Sang Byun, Seong-gu N Hong, Yutai Kato, Lance L Snead
Publication Type
Conference Paper
Book Title
Proceedings of the 30th international conference on advanced ceramics and composites
Publication Date
Page Number
1
Conference Name
Symposium on Ceramics on Nuclear and Alternative Energy Applications
Conference Location
Cocoa Beach, Florida, United States of America
Conference Sponsor
The American Ceramics Society
Conference Date
-

Internal pressurization and diametrical loading techniques were developed to measure the fracture strength of the chemical vapor deposition (CVD) silicon carbide (SiC) coatings in nuclear fuel particles. Miniature tubular and hemispherical shell specimens were used for both test methods. In the internal pressurization test an expansion load was applied to the inner surface of a specimen by use of a compressively loaded elastomeric insert (polyurethane). In the crush test a diametrical compressive load was applied to the outer surface(s) of a specimen. The test results revealed that the fracture strengths from four test methods obeyed Weibull's two-parameter distribution, and the measured values of the Weibull modulus were consistent for different test methods. The fracture strengths measured by crush test techniques were larger than those by internal pressurization tests. This is because the internal pressurization produces uniform stress distribution while the diametrical loading technique produces severely localized stress distribution. The test method dependence of fracture strength was explained by the size effect predicted by effective surface.