Abstract
The development of damage-resistant structural materials that can
withstand harsh environments is a major issue in materials science and
engineering. Bioinspired brick-and-mortar designs have recently
demonstrated a range of interesting mechanical properties in
proof-of-concept studies. However, reproducibility and scalability
issues associated with the actual processing routes have impeded further
developments and industrialization of such materials. Here we
demonstrate a simple approach based on uniaxial pressing and field
assisted sintering of commercially available raw materials to process
bioinspired ceramic/ceramic composites of larger thickness than previous
approaches, with a sample thickness up to 1 cm. The ceramic composite
retains the strength typical of dense alumina (430 ± 30 MPa) while
keeping the excellent damage resistance demonstrated previously at the
millimeter scale with a crack initiation toughness of 6.6 MPa.m 1/2 and
fracture toughness up to 17.6 MPa.m 1/2. These results validate the
potential of these all-ceramic composites, previously demonstrated at
lab scale only, and could enable their optimization, scale-up, and
industrialization.
Supplementary materials
Title
A simple approach to bulk bioinspired tough ceramics - Supplementary Informations
Description
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