| BERKELEY,
CA -- Advanced ceramics are wonderful materials – they
withstand temperatures that would melt steel and resist
most corrosive chemicals. If only they weren’t so brittle.
Poor resistance to fracture damage has been the major
drawback to the widespread use of advanced ceramics
as structural materials. Help, however, may be on the
way. A
collaboration of scientists led by researchers with
the U.S. Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) has uncovered clues
at the atomic level that could lead to a new generation
of much tougher advanced ceramics to be used in applications
like gas turbine engines.
Working
with the unique facilities at Berkeley Lab’s National
Center for Electron Microscopy (NCEM), the collaboration
has produced atomic-resolution images of silicon nitride
ceramics that were sintered with oxides of rare earth
elements to toughen them up and prevent cracks from
spreading. These images revealed, for the first time,
the exact location of each rare-earth atom in the
final material and how their presence affected its
toughness.
“Our
findings are a prime factor in understanding the origin
of the mechanical properties in advanced ceramics
and should make it possible to do the precise tailoring
in the future that will critically improve the performances
of these materials over a wide range of applications,”
says Robert Ritchie, a materials scientist who holds
a joint appointment with Berkeley Lab’s Materials
Sciences Division and the University of California
at Berkeley’s Department of Materials Science and
Engineering.
Ritchie
and Alexander Ziegler, a member of Ritchie’s research
group, were the principal authors of a paper by the
collaboration which appears in the December 3 issue
of the journal /Science./ The other co-authors were
Christian Kisielowski and Nigel Browning of Berkeley
Lab, Juan Idrobo of UC Davis, and Michael Cinibulk
of the Air Force Research Laboratory in Ohio.
Ceramics
are probably the oldest construction materials known,
their use dating back thousands of years, when they
were made from wet clay and baked at high temperatures
until hard. Today’s advanced ceramics are made from
powders of complex chemical compounds and their production
requires careful control at every stage of the process.
Much
attention is currently being focused on silicon nitride
advanced ceramics, which are considered to be leading
candidates as structural materials for future gas
turbine engines. These engines, which are projected
for use in electrical power plants, among other applications,
will burn fuel at temperatures of around 1,200 degrees
Celsius (2,192 degrees Fahrenheit), well beyond the
tolerance of metals, even nickel-based super-alloys.
Running at such high temperatures, the advanced gas
turbines are expected to achieve a much higher thermal-to-electricity
efficiency than today’s steam-driven electrical power
plants, while emitting far less greenhouse gases.
For this to happen, however, the brittleness problem
of the silicon nitride ceramics must be solved.
Says
Ziegler, “To enhance the toughness of a silicon nitride
ceramic, it is often necessary to engineer a thin
(nanoscale) film in the ceramic’s grain boundaries,
which cracks when the ceramic begins to fracture.
This promotes the formation of grain bridges which
span across the crack, making it more difficult for
the crack to propagate.”
Understanding
the nature and properties of these nano-sized intergranular
films is crucial to enhancing ceramic toughness, according
to Ritchie and Ziegler. However, critical information
about the chemical composition, atomic structure and
bonding characteristics of such films has long been
missing.
“The
problem was the nanometer dimensions of the intergranular
films,”
Ziegler says. “To gain information on the local atomic
structure and bonding characteristics requires characterization
at Ångstrøm
(single-atom) to sub-Ångstrøm scales.
Until recently, no microscopes or chemical analysis
probes have been able to resolve such information
at these length scales.”
NCEM,
however, houses a Scanning Transmission Electron Microscope
(STEM) which is optimized for materials applications
that require the highest resolutions for both imaging
and spectroscopy. With the help of NCEM staff members
Kisielowski and Browning, Ritchie, Ziegler and the
collaboration used this microscope, in combination
with an imaging technique called “high-angle annular
dark-field STEM,” and a chemical analysis technique,
called electron-energy-loss-spectroscopy (EELS), to
examine a silicon nitride ceramic doped with several
different rare-earth elements. They specifically looked
at how the atomic bonding configuration of the intergranular
phase changed with a change in the rare earth sintering
additive.
“We
were able to determine the exact location of each
rare-earth atom and to see how these atoms specifically
bonded to the interface between the intergranular
phase and the matrix grains of the ceramic,” Ritchie
says. “We saw that each rare-earth element attaches
to the interface differently, depending on its atomic
size, electronic configuration, and the presence of
oxygen atoms along the interface. This information
can be related to the fracture toughness of the ceramic,
which means we should be able to atomistically tailor
the grain boundaries in future ceramics to give optimum
mechanical properties.”
The
collaboration says that its results with the silicon
nitride ceramic and the rare earth glassy films should
be applicable to other types of advanced ceramics
as well.
Says
Ritchie, “It's interesting, but intergranular glassy
films used to be thought of as an undesirable feature
in ceramics, much like inclusions in steels. We now
realize they are the key feature that promotes ceramic
toughness.”
Berkeley
Lab is a U.S. Department of Energy national laboratory
located in Berkeley, California. It conducts unclassified
scientific research and is managed by the University
of California. Visit our Website at www.lbl.gov/. |