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Creep Due to a Non‐Newtonian Grain Boundary Phase
Journal article

Creep Due to a Non‐Newtonian Grain Boundary Phase

Abstract

A model has been developed for creep due to viscous flow in a material containing a non‐Newtonian, amorphous grain boundary phase. The model describes the process whereby glass is squeezed out from between grain boundary layers in compression, and flows toward grain boundary layers under tension. A pseudo steady state, in which the creep rate is constant, is seen at small strains. However, beyond a critical strain, the strain rate starts to decrease rapidly, and no creep is possible once adjacent grains come into contact. The maximum possible strain is twice as large in tension as in compression. This leads to a form of anisotropy which may explain the shift in neutral axis which occurs during flexural creep.

Authors

Chadwick MM; Wilkinson DS; Dryden JR

Journal

Journal of the American Ceramic Society, Vol. 75, No. 9, pp. 2327–2334

Publisher

Wiley

Publication Date

January 1, 1992

DOI

10.1111/j.1151-2916.1992.tb05582.x

ISSN

0002-7820

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