Thermal shock resistance describes how well a coating or material preserves integrity under rapid or cyclic temperature change. In thermal barrier systems, this topic is directly linked to lifetime.

What Thermal Shock Really Describes

Interface and microstructure under temperature cycling

Thermal shock resistance should not be reduced to whether a visible crack forms. The real issue is how thermal-expansion mismatch, interface stability, and microstructure behave under cyclic loading.

This is especially critical in multilayer systems where ceramic top coat, bond coat, and oxide development all influence one another.

In high-temperature coating work, thermal shock is therefore a core performance criterion rather than a secondary observation.

Which Variables Matter Most?

Main factors that shape thermal shock resistance

Aspect Interpretation for Thermal Shock Resistance
Porosity and Columnar Structure Directly influence stress distribution and crack evolution during thermal cycling.
Interface Quality Bond-coat and top-coat compatibility can delay or accelerate failure.
Oxidation Response Oxide growth at high temperature strongly affects interface stability.
Cycle Profile Temperature difference, dwell time, and repetition count can change performance significantly.
Which Pages Should Be Read Together?

Thermal shock should not stay isolated

Main Topic

Thermal Barrier Coatings

Thermal shock becomes most meaningful when read within TBC architecture and high-temperature behavior.

TBC Page

High Temperature

Oxidation Resistance

Oxide growth at the interface is directly connected to cracking and spallation under thermal cycling.

Oxidation Resistance

Microstructure

Coating Porosity

Porosity and columnar architecture are core variables in stress management during repeated heating and cooling.

Porosity Guide

Frequently Asked Questions

Quick answers about thermal shock resistance

What does thermal shock resistance mean?

It describes the ability of a coating or material to remain intact under rapid or cyclic temperature change.

Why does thermal shock resistance matter in TBC systems?

Because cyclic loading can drive crack formation, interface damage, and spallation, which directly affect lifetime.

Is thermal shock judged only by visible cracking?

No. Microstructure, porosity, interface quality, and oxidation response should be interpreted together.