0000000001218894

AUTHOR

Linfeng Ding

showing 5 related works from this author

Preparation and characterization of continuous fly ash derived glass fibers with improved tensile strength

2018

Abstract The coal-based energy production in China generates more than 600 million tons of coal fly ash (CFA) each year, which drives us searching for new methods for recycling CFA. In this work, continuous glass fibers with a range of CFA (25–45%) were successfully prepared without showing any sign of fiber crystallization. The measured fiber tensile strength was found to increase with CFA proportionally. The fiber derived from 45% CFA exhibited the best tensile strength (higher than the E glass fiber prepared/tested under the same conditions) and good chemical stability (98% mass retention in the acid corrosion test). Our study shows a feasibility of making continuous CFA derived glass fi…

Materials scienceGlass fiberIron oxide02 engineering and technologycomplex mixtures7. Clean energy01 natural sciences12. Responsible consumptionlaw.inventionchemistry.chemical_compoundlaw0103 physical sciencesUltimate tensile strengthGeneral Materials ScienceCoalFiberComposite materialCrystallization010302 applied physicsbusiness.industryMechanical Engineering021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyCondensed Matter PhysicsDurabilitychemistry13. Climate actionMechanics of MaterialsFly ash0210 nano-technologybusinessMaterials Letters
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Plastic yielding of glass in high-pressure torsion apparatus

2018

International audience; Hardness measurements performed at room temperature have demonstrated that glass can flow under elevated pressure, whereas the effect of high pressure on glass rheology remains poorly quantified. Here, we applied a high-pressure torsion (HPT) apparatus to deform SCHOTT SF6 â glass and attempted to quantify the effect of pressure and temperature on the shear deformation of glass subjected to pressures from 0.3 GPa to 7 GPa and temperatures from 25 ℃ to 496 ℃. Results show that the plastic yield deformation was occurring during the HPT experiments on the SF6 glass at elevated temperature from 350 ℃ to 496 ℃. The yield stress of SF6 glass decreases with increasing tempe…

010302 applied physicsArrhenius equationPlastic yieldingMaterials scienceYield (engineering)Deformation (mechanics)Plastic yieldingTorsion (mechanics)02 engineering and technologyActivation energy[SPI.MAT] Engineering Sciences [physics]/Materials021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology01 natural sciencesglass flow[SPI.MAT]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Materialspressuresymbols.namesakehigh-pressure torsionRheologyHigh pressure0103 physical sciencessymbolsGeneral Materials ScienceComposite material0210 nano-technologyInternational Journal of Applied Glass Science
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Effect of pressure and temperature on viscosity of a borosilicate glass

2018

International audience; During industrial glass production processes, the actual distribution of stress components in the glass during scribing remains, to date, poorly quantified, and thus continues to be challenging to model numerically. In this work, we experimentally quantified the effect of pressure and temperature on the viscosity of SCHOTT N-BK7 glass, by performing in situ deformation experiments at temperatures between 550 and 595 °C and confining pressures between 100 MPa and 300 MPa. Experiments were performed at constant displacement rates to produce almost constant strain rates between 9.70 × 10 −6 s-1 and 4.98 × 10-5 s-1. The resulting net axial stresses range from 81 MPa to 8…

Glass productionWork (thermodynamics)Materials science010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesStrain (chemistry)Borosilicate glassbusiness.industry02 engineering and technology021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology01 natural sciences[SPI.MAT]Engineering Sciences [physics]/MaterialsStress (mechanics)ViscosityMaterials ChemistryCeramics and CompositesComposite materialDeformation (engineering)0210 nano-technologybusinessDisplacement (fluid)0105 earth and related environmental sciencesJournal of the American Ceramic Society
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Rhéologie et déformation du verre dans des conditions extrêmes

2018

Hardness measurements performed at room temperature have proven that glass can flow under elevated pressure. During industrial glass production processes, the actual distribution of stress components in the glass during scribing remains, to date, poorly quantified, and thus continues to be challenging to model numerically. To better quantify the viscous contribution to the rheology of glass, the effect of pressure on the viscosity and structural relaxation of glass, needs to be quantified experimentally by in situ deformation measurements.In this thesis, I performed experiments and models to study: (i) the volumetric relaxation of glass after high-pressure treatment above the glass transiti…

pressureverrepression[PHYS.MECA.MEMA] Physics [physics]/Mechanics [physics]/Mechanics of materials [physics.class-ph][PHYS.PHYS.PHYS-GEO-PH] Physics [physics]/Physics [physics]/Geophysics [physics.geo-ph]températurerheologyrhéologiedéformationglass
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Pressure dependence of density and structural relaxation of glass near the glass transition region

2017

International audience; A simplified and effective pressure cell together with an experimental procedure has been developed and applied to compress samples of SCHOTT N-BK7 glass under static high pressures in a piston-cylinder apparatus. Results from the density and volume recovery measurements show that, the glass samples were effectively densified in piston-cylinder apparatus with the density at room temperature increasing linearly with frozen-in pressure. To explain the experimental data, we developed a mathematical model based on a suggestion by Gupta (1988) with two internal parameters, named fictive temperature (Tf) and fictive pressure (Pf), which fits the experimental data well.

Materials sciencePiston-cylinder apparatus[ SPI.MAT ] Engineering Sciences [physics]/MaterialsThermodynamics02 engineering and technologyPressure dependence021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology01 natural sciencesFictive temperatureHigh pressureFictive pressureVolume (thermodynamics)High pressure0103 physical sciencesMaterials ChemistryCeramics and CompositesRelaxation (physics)Piston-cylinder apparatusGlass010306 general physics0210 nano-technologyGlass transitionStructural relaxationPressure cell
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