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J. S. Yang
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Proceedings Papers
Investigation of Crack Propagation Behavior of Thermal Barrier Coatings Fabricated by Atmospheric Plasma Spraying in the Process of Uniaxial Tension Using Acoustic Emission Technique
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ITSC2014, Thermal Spray 2014: Proceedings from the International Thermal Spray Conference, 686-694, May 21–23, 2014,
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View Papertitled, Investigation of Crack Propagation Behavior of Thermal Barrier Coatings Fabricated by Atmospheric Plasma Spraying in the Process of Uniaxial Tension Using Acoustic Emission Technique
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for content titled, Investigation of Crack Propagation Behavior of Thermal Barrier Coatings Fabricated by Atmospheric Plasma Spraying in the Process of Uniaxial Tension Using Acoustic Emission Technique
In this study, acoustic emission sensing is used to monitor interfacial cracking in thermal barrier coatings during uniaxial tensile adhesion testing. The TBCs consist of a ZrO 2 topcoat and a NiCrAl bond coat, both of which are applied by atmospheric plasma spraying. Tensile testing was performed to failure and the resulting fracture surfaces were examined by SEM and XRD analysis. Experimental results show that cracks usually initiate in the ceramic layer then propagate toward the metallic-ceramic interface where failure occurs. Finite element simulations were also conducted, confirming the experimental findings.