Abstract
An elevated-temperature in situ microtomography apparatus that can measure internal damage parameters under tensile loads at high temperatures up to 1000 °C is developed using a laboratory X-ray source. The maximum resolution of the apparatus can reach 3 μm by a reasonable design. A high-temperature environment is accomplished by means of a heating chamber based on a radiation technique using four halogen lamps with ellipsoidal reflectors. To obtain high resolution, the chamber is much smaller in the direction of the X-ray beam than in the other two directions. Two thin aluminum windows are chosen as the chamber walls perpendicular to and intersecting the X-ray beam. A material testing machine equipped with two synchronous rotating motors is specially designed for mechanical loading and 360° rotation of the specimen, and customized grips are developed to conduct tensile tests. A microfocus X-ray source and a high-resolution detector are used to produce and detect X rays, and the distances among the X-ray source, specimen, and high-resolution detector can be adjusted to obtain different resolutions. To show the main functions and usability of the apparatus, carbon-fiber-reinforced silicon-carbide matrix specimens are subjected to in situ X-ray microtomography tensile tests at 800 °C and 1000 °C, and the crack propagation behavior under thermomechanical coupling loads is studied.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 033704 |
Journal | Review of Scientific Instruments |
Volume | 92 |
Issue number | 3 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Mar 2021 |