Nanomaterials (Jan 2021)

Microstructure and Fracture Mechanism Investigation of Porous Silicon Nitride–Zirconia–Graphene Composite Using Multi-Scale and In-Situ Microscopy

  • Zhongquan Liao,
  • Yvonne Standke,
  • Jürgen Gluch,
  • Katalin Balázsi,
  • Onkar Pathak,
  • Sören Höhn,
  • Mathias Herrmann,
  • Stephan Werner,
  • Ján Dusza,
  • Csaba Balázsi,
  • Ehrenfried Zschech

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nano11020285
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 2
p. 285

Abstract

Read online

Silicon nitride–zirconia–graphene composites with high graphene content (5 wt.% and 30 wt.%) were sintered by gas pressure sintering (GPS). The effect of the multilayer graphene (MLG) content on microstructure and fracture mechanism is investigated by multi-scale and in-situ microscopy. Multi-scale microscopy confirms that the phases disperse evenly in the microstructure without obvious agglomeration. The MLG flakes well dispersed between ceramic matrix grains slow down the phase transformation from α to β-Si3N4, subsequent needle-like growth of β-Si3N4 rods and the densification due to the reduction in sintering additives particularly in the case with 30 wt.% MLG. The size distribution of Si3N4 phase shifts towards a larger size range with the increase in graphene content from 5 to 30 wt.%, while a higher graphene content (30 wt.%) hinders the growth of the ZrO2 phase. The composite with 30 wt.% MLG has a porosity of 47%, the one with 5 wt.% exhibits a porosity of approximately 30%. Both Si3N4/MLG composites show potential resistance to contact or indentation damage. Crack initiation and propagation, densification of the porous microstructure, and shift of ceramic phases are observed using in-situ transmission electron microscopy. The crack propagates through the ceramic/MLG interface and through both the ceramic and the non-ceramic components in the composite with low graphene content. However, the crack prefers to bypass ceramic phases in the composite with 30 wt.% MLG.

Keywords