T. Yu. Sablina
Russian Academy of Sciences
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Featured researches published by T. Yu. Sablina.
Technical Physics Letters | 1999
S. P. Buyakova; Han Wei; Li Dunmy; Chen Haiyun; T. Yu. Sablina; A. G. Mel’nikov; S. N. Kul’kov
The properties of the mechanical behavior of porous ceramic based on partially stabilized zirconium dioxide are studied. The special features of the mechanical behavior of ceramic with different degrees of porosity are determined. It is shown that three macrodeformation mechanisms are observed simultaneously in the material: elastic deformation characteristic of compact material; microcracking with accumulation of microdefects; and displacement of local volumes of material into the pore space. A ceramic with porosity less than 20% retains its capacity for transformational changes in the stress field of a propagating crack.
Glass and Ceramics | 1994
T. Yu. Sablina; N. L. Savchenko; A. G. Mel'nikov; S. N. Kul'kov
The results of a study of the phase composition and mechanical properties of a ceramic based on ZrO2-Y2O3 after vacuum sintering of powders with complex morphology in a wide range of temperatures and sintering holding times are reported. Dense ceramic materials with high mechanical properties were obtained.
Powder Metallurgy and Metal Ceramics | 1995
N. L. Savchenko; T. Yu. Sablina; T. M. Poletika; A. S. Artish; S. N. Kul'kov
The phase composition and mechanical properties of ZrO2-based ceramics prepared by sintering plasmochemical powders of complex morphology in air and in vacuum were compared. Sintering at a high temperatures in vacuum produced material exhibiting high density and good mechanical properties, in which the zirconium dioxide was entirely in the tetragonal form.
Powder Metallurgy and Metal Ceramics | 2013
N. L. Savchenko; T. Yu. Sablina; A. G. Mel'nikov; S. N. Kul’kov
The paper discusses the wear resistance, friction coefficient, and structure of friction surfaces of submicron crystalline Y–TZP–Al2O3 composite rubbed against a steel disk counterface at a pressure of 5 MPa in a range of sliding speeds from 1 to 20 m/sec. It is shown that, starting at 2 m/sec, the friction surface is subdivided by a crack network into separate regions within which local spalling occurs at the maximum wear rate and a sliding speed of 5 m/sec. X-ray diffraction reveals inversion (with respect to the initial state) of the peak intensities of the tetragonal phase with random crystalline grain orientation. The degree of this inversion increases with sliding speed. These results are discussed in terms of the effects exerted by the reorientation of martensite-free deformation twins in the tetragonal phase and the formation of a quasi-liquid film on the wear resistance of Y–TZP–Al2O3.
Technical Physics Letters | 2004
T. Yu. Sablina; A. G. Mel’nikov; S. N. Kul’kov
The dependence of the Vickers hardness (HV) on the indenter load has been studied in a series of materials capable of featuring phase transitions under applied stress. The HV value in such materials increases with the load as a result of the phase transition.
Powder Metallurgy and Metal Ceramics | 1995
N. L. Savchenko; T. Yu. Sablina; S. N. Kul'kov
Powders produced by thermal dissociation of metals dispersed from droplets of salt solutions in the plasma of arc or high-frequency dischage have often a complicated morphology (hollow spheres, flakes). This complicates production from these powders of dense ceramic parts based on ZrO{sub 2} - Y{sub 2}O{sub 3} hardened by martensitic transformation. The main special feature of producing these materials is that at the temperature of conventional sintering in air higher than 1600{degrees}C required for obtaining high density the grains start to grow and this leads to the T{yields}M transformation in cooling which fractures the specimens. It was shown that sintering the plasmochemical zirconia, stabilizes 3% (mol) Y{sub 2}O{sub 3}, in vacuum at 1800{degrees}C makes it possible to avoid destabilizing T-ZrO{sub 2} in cooling and produce a dense and strong material. The aim of this work was to examine the properties based on zirconia, partially stabilized with Y{sub 2}O{sub 3}, after vacuum sintering in a wide temperature range up to 1750{degrees}C.
Russian Physics Journal | 1994
N. L. Savchenko; T. Yu. Sablina; S. N. Kul'kov
The phase composition and mechanical properties have been examined for a ZrO2-Y2O3 ceramic having a combined hardening mechanism, which was made by high-temperature sintering under vacuum. The mechanism enables one to alter the properties of the zirconium dioxide base ceramic substantially. The material has a combination of high strength and toughness because of the high viscosity of the untransformed part of the material, which produces an additional strengthening effect along with the transformational hardening.
Powder Metallurgy and Metal Ceramics | 1994
N. L. Savchenko; T. Yu. Sablina; T. M. Poletika; A. S. Artish; S. N. Kul'kov
Changes in phase composition and mechanical properties of sintered ZrO2 + 3% (mole) Y2O3 specimens were examined after annealing in air and after various mechanical operations. Compacted ceramic specimens containing T and T′ phase were obtained by sintering in a vacuum at 1800°C. Ceramics containing T and T′ phases have excellent toughness (K1c up to 15 MPa·m1/2), bend strength up to 800 MPa and HV hardness up to 13 GPa.
Russian Physics Journal | 2016
N. L. Savchenko; T. Yu. Sablina; I. N. Sevostyanova; S. P. Buуakova; S. N. Kul'kov
Powder Metallurgy and Metal Ceramics | 1996
N. L. Savchenko; T. Yu. Sablina; S. N. Kul'kov