Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Strong, tough and stiff bioinspired ceramics from brittle constituents

2014; Nature Portfolio; Volume: 13; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1038/nmat3915

ISSN

1476-4660

Autores

Florian Bouville, Éric Maire, Sylvain Meille, Bertrand Van de Moortèle, Adam J. Stevenson, Sylvain Deville,

Tópico(s)

Electrophoretic Deposition in Materials Science

Resumo

High strength and high toughness are usually mutually exclusive in engineering materials. In ceramics, improving toughness usually relies on the introduction of a metallic or polymeric ductile phase, but this decreases the material’s strength and stiffness as well as its high-temperature stability. Although natural materials that are both strong and tough rely on a combination of mechanisms operating at different length scales, the relevant structures have been extremely difficult to replicate. Here, we report a bioinspired approach based on widespread ceramic processing techniques for the fabrication of bulk ceramics without a ductile phase and with a unique combination of high strength (470 MPa), high toughness (17.3 MPa m1/2), and high stiffness (290 GPa). Because only mineral constituents are needed, these ceramics retain their mechanical properties at high temperatures (600 °C). Our bioinspired, material-independent approach should find uses in the design and processing of materials for structural, transportation and energy-related applications. The toughness of ceramic materials can be improved by introducing a polymeric or metallic ductile phase, yet most often this is at the expense of strength, stiffness and high-temperature stability. Now, a simple processing route based on widespread ceramic processing techniques is shown to produce bulk ceramics that mimic the structure of natural nacre and have a unique combination of high strength, toughness and stiffness, even at high temperatures.

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