C/C–SiC–HfC composites were fabricated via precursor infiltration and pyrolysis using a mixture solution of organic hafnium-containing polymer and polycarbosilane as precursor. The microstructures and the phases of the composites were analyzed by scanning electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction. The ablation resistance of the composites was evaluated under 3,000 °C oxyacetylene torch. After ablation for 120 s, the composites exhibit good ablation properties with the linear and mass ablation rates of 9.1 9 10-4mm/s and 1.30 9 10-3g/s, which are far lower than those of the C/C–SiC composites. The excellent ablative property of the C/C–SiC–HfC composites is resulted from the formation of HfO2 molten layer on the surface of the composites, which could play a positive role in reducing heat transfer and preventing oxygen transport to the underlying carbon substrate.
Before densification by chemical vapor infiltration,carbon or SiC nanofibers were grown on the surface of carbon fibers by catalytic chemical vapor deposition using electroplated Ni as catalyst.The modification and mechanism of nanofibers on the pyrocarbon deposition during chemical vapor infiltration were investigated.The results show that the nanofibers improve the surface activity of the carbon fibers and become active nucleation centers during chemical vapor infiltration.They can induce the ordered deposition of pyrocarbon and adjust the interface bonding between pyrocarbon and carbon fibers during the infiltration.