Ceramic composites portend long turbopump livesUse of continuous fiber reinforced ceramic matrix composites (FRCMC) for turbopump hot section components offers a number of benefits. The performance benefits of incresed turbine inlet temperature are apparent and readily quantifiable. Perhaps less obvious are the potential benefits of incresed component life. At nominal turbopump operating conditions, FRCMC offer increased operating temperature margin relative to conventional materials. This results in potential for significant life enhancement. Other attributes (e.g., thermal shock resistance and high cycle fatigue endurance) of FRCMC provide even greater potential to improve life and reduce maintenance requirements. Silicon carbide (SiC0 matrix composites with carbon fibers (C/SiC) do not degrade when exposed to hydrogen-rich steam for 10 hours at 1200 C. This FRCMC is resistant to thermal shock transients far in excess of those anticipated for advanced, high temperature turbomachinery. Orthogonal, two-dimensional (2D0, plain woven, C/SiC also does not degrade when subjected to tensile-tensile fatigue at room temperature for 4 x 10(exp 5) cycles at 75% of the ultimate strength. Runout at greater than 10(exp 6) cycle occurs for axial specimens subjected to fully reversed strain controlled fatigue at ambient temperature and 0.3% strain.
Document ID
19950062053
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Herbell, Tomas P. (NASA Lewis Research Center United States)
Eckel, Andrew J. (NASA Lewis Research Center United States)
Brockmeyer, Jerry W. (NASA Lewis Research Center Cleveland, OH, United States)
Mitchell, Michael R. (NASA Lewis Research Center Cleveland, OH, United States)