Title of article
The Brazilian test: a tool for measuring the toughness of a material and its brittle to ductile transition
Author/Authors
José Rafael Capua Proveti · Gérard Michot، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
6
From page
455
To page
460
Abstract
Due to their brittleness, assembling of
ceramics pieces is generally achieved through brazing
but thermal stresses during cooling frequently
induce cracking of the material used for brazing.
In order to check if such damage is avoidable, it is
necessary to characterize the brittle to ductile transition
(BDT) of the material. Simple compression
is not suited for crack studies, because of mixed
loading (mode II+compressive mode I cracking).
Another type of test, the cylinder splitting test,
known as the Brazilian test, can be carried out
by applying compressive forces on two opposite
generatrix of a cylinder: this causes a uniform tensile
stress on the plane containing the axis of the
cylinder and the generatrix, leading tomodeI cracking.
The advantage of this test is to avoid expensive
and random machining of brittle samples. This
study shows that the Brazilian test is well adapted
for the measurement of toughness and the characterization
of the BDT of materials whose room
temperature behaviour is brittle (silicides, intermetallics
etc.).
Keywords
Mechanical test · Brazilian test ·Toughness · Brittle to ductile transition · Silicide ·Chalk · Complex potentials
Journal title
International Journal of Fracture
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
International Journal of Fracture
Record number
828397
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