Thermal shock
Encyclopedia : T : TH : THE : Thermal shock
| Mechanical failure modes |
|---|
| Buckling |
| Corrosion |
| Creep |
| Fatigue |
| Fracture |
| Melting |
| Thermal shock |
| Wear |
Thermal shock is the name given to cracking as a result of rapid temperature change. Glass and ceramic objects are particularly vulnerable to this form of failure, due to their low toughness, low thermal conductivity, as well as their high-melting point (which often leads to their use in high-temperature applications.)
Thermal shock occurs when a thermal gradient causes different parts of an object to expand by different amounts. This differential expansion can be understood in terms of stress or of strain, equivalently. At some point, this stress overcomes the strength of the material, causing a crack to form. If nothing stops this crack from propagating through the material, it will cause the object to fail.
Thermal shock can be prevented by:
- Reducing the thermal gradient seen by the object, by
- # changing its temperature more slowly
- # increasing the material's thermal conductivity
- Reducing the material's coefficient of thermal expansion
- Increasing its strength
- Increasing its toughness, by
- # crack tip blunting, i.e., plasticity or phase transformation
- # crack deflection
Reinforced carbon-carbon is extremely resistant to thermal shock, due to graphite's extremely high thermal conductivity and low expansion coefficient, the high strength of carbon fiber, and a reasonable ability to deflect cracks within the structure.
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