Evolution of thermal microcracking in refractory ZrO2-SiO2 after application of external loads at high temperatures

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Abstract

Zirconia-based cast refractories are widely used for glass furnace applications. Since they have to withstand harsh chemical as well as thermo-mechanical environments, internal stresses and microcracking are often present in such materials under operating conditions (sometimes in excess of 1700 °C).We studied the evolution of thermal (CTE) and mechanical (Young's modulus) properties as a function of temperature in a fused-cast refractory containing 94 wt.% of monoclinic ZrO2 and 6 wt.% of a silicate glassy phase. With the aid of X-ray refraction techniques (yielding the internal specific surface in materials), we also monitored the evolution of microcracking as a function of thermal cycles (crossing the martensitic phase transformation around 1000 °C) under externally applied stress. We found that external compressive stress leads to a strong decrease of the internal surface per unit volume, but a tensile load has a similar (though not so strong) effect. In agreement with existing literature on β-eucryptite microcracked ceramics, we could explain these phenomena by microcrack closure in the load direction in the compression case, and by microcrack propagation (rather than microcrack nucleation) under tensile conditions.

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Laquai, R., Gouraud, F., Müller, B. R., Huger, M., Chotard, T., Antou, G., & Bruno, G. (2019). Evolution of thermal microcracking in refractory ZrO2-SiO2 after application of external loads at high temperatures. Materials, 12(7). https://doi.org/10.3390/ma12071017

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