Search results for "T method"

showing 10 items of 1254 documents

Application of cohesive-zone models to delamination behaviour of composite material

2012

International audience; The parameters of cohesive elements have to be chosen correctly in the simulation of composite delamination by finite element method: such as interface strength, interface stiffness and shape of cohesive law. The purpose of this work is to investigate their influence on the accuracy of the results obtained. A three-dimensional cohesive-zone model has been established using Ls-dyna to simulate Double-Cantilever-Beam mode I (DCB) and Edge-Notched-Flexure mode II (ENF) tests. The influence of these parameters of cohesive element on the maximum load and the slope of load-displacement curve have been discussed by comparing experimental and numerical results. Four traction…

Work (thermodynamics)Materials scienceComposite numberBilinear interpolation02 engineering and technology0203 mechanical engineeringmedicineElectrical and Electronic EngineeringComposite materialCivil and Structural Engineeringbusiness.industryMechanical EngineeringDelaminationMode (statistics)StiffnessStructural engineering[PHYS.MECA.MSMECA]Physics [physics]/Mechanics [physics]/Materials and structures in mechanics [physics.class-ph]021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyGeotechnical Engineering and Engineering GeologyFinite element methodExponential function020303 mechanical engineering & transportsMechanics of Materialsmedicine.symptom0210 nano-technologybusinessWorld Journal of Engineering
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A computational framework for low-cycle fatigue in polycrystalline materials

2021

Abstract A three-dimensional framework for low-cycle fatigue analysis of polycrystalline aggregates is proposed in this work. First, a cohesive law coupling plasticity and damage is developed for modelling cycle-by-cycle degradation of material interfaces up to complete de-cohesion and failure. The law may model both quasi-static degradation under increasing monotonic load and degradation under cyclic loading, through a coupled plasticity-damage model whose activation and flow rules are formulated in a thermodynamically consistent framework. The proposed interface laws have been then implemented and coupled with a multi-region boundary element formulation, with the aim of analysing low-cycl…

Work (thermodynamics)Materials scienceMechanical EngineeringFlow (psychology)Computational MechanicsGeneral Physics and AstronomyMicromechanicsMonotonic functionMechanicsPlasticityIntergranular corrosionComputer Science ApplicationsMechanics of MaterialsBoundary Element method Cohesive Zone Modelling Low-cycle fatigue Multiscale Materials Modelling Polycrystalline materialsDegradation (geology)Coupling (piping)Settore ING-IND/04 - Costruzioni E Strutture Aerospaziali
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On tool stirring action in friction stir welding of work hardenable aluminium alloys

2013

In the paper solid state bonding conditions obtained in friction stir welding (FSW) of AA5754-H111 butt joints are analysed, considering the so called zigzag line in the transverse section of the joints. A wide experimental campaign was carried out varying both tool advancing speed and tool rotational one. The effects of the process on the mechanical properties of the joint were highlighted and micro- and macro-observations were used in order to explain the reasons of the enhanced mechanical properties found for the welded material. Numerical results derived from a FEM model previously developed by the authors were utilised to point out the different mechanical and metallurgical behavior of…

Work (thermodynamics)Materials scienceMetallurgychemistry.chemical_elementWeldingCondensed Matter PhysicsFinite element methodlaw.inventionTransverse planechemistryAluminiumlawButt jointFriction stir weldingFSW Mechanical properties FEMGeneral Materials ScienceSettore ING-IND/16 - Tecnologie E Sistemi Di LavorazioneJoint (geology)Science and Technology of Welding and Joining
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Flying Laser Spot Thermography technique for the NDE of Fibre Metal Laminates disbonds

2017

Abstract The present work investigates the features of an active Infrared-NDT Thermography technique derived from a Flying Laser Spot set-up for the analysis of interlaminar disbonds in layered structures in general and Fibre Metal Laminates in particular. The presented technique uses a laser-spot heat source, which moves at a constant speed, raster scanning the object surface. Interlaminar defects parallel to the surfaces act as barriers towards through-the-thickness heat diffusion. This produces some modifications over the surface thermal field which are well identified in the Standard Deviation calculated over a Reference Area following the heat source. The mechanisms leading to such def…

Work (thermodynamics)Materials scienceNon-destructive testingLaserCeramics and Composite02 engineering and technology01 natural scienceslaw.inventionSettore ING-IND/14 - Progettazione Meccanica E Costruzione Di MacchineLayered structurelawNondestructive testing0103 physical sciencesThermalFinite Element Analysis (FEA)Composite materialCivil and Structural Engineering010302 applied physicsbusiness.industryDelamination021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyLaserFinite element methodIR thermographyDelaminationCeramics and CompositesHeat equation0210 nano-technologyRaster scanbusiness
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The interphase model applied to the analysis of masonry structures

2014

Abstract Masonry material presents a mechanical response strongly dependent on the static and kinematic phenomena occurring in the constituents and at their joints. At the mesoscopic level the interaction between the units is simulated by means of specific mechanical devices such as the zero thickness interface model where the contact tractions and the displacement discontinuities are the primary static and kinematic variables respectively. In many cases the joint response depends also on internal stresses and strains within the interface layer adjacent to the joint interfaces. The introduction of internal stresses and strains leads to the formulation of the interphase model, a sort of enha…

Work (thermodynamics)Materials sciencePlasticityComputational MechanicsGeneral Physics and Astronomysymbols.namesakemedicineMasonryJoint (geology)Interphasebusiness.industryMechanical EngineeringStructural engineeringMechanicsMasonryFinite element methodComputer Science ApplicationsDamageMechanics of MaterialsJoint stiffnessHelmholtz free energysymbolsInterphasemedicine.symptombusinessSettore ICAR/08 - Scienza Delle CostruzioniDisplacement (fluid)
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Investigations on the linear friction welding process through numerical simulations and experiments

2012

Abstract Linear Friction Welding (LFW) is a solid-state joining process applied to non-axisymmetric components. LFW involves joining of materials through the relative motion of two components undergoing an axial force. In such process the heat source is given by the frictional forces work decaying into heat determining a local softening of the material and eventually bonding conditions. In the paper the authors present a designed and assembled laboratory fixture for LFW operations and the results of an experimental and numerical campaign aimed to weld steel parts. The dedicated fixture permitted to highlight the effect of the most important process parameters. Process conditions allowing ef…

Work (thermodynamics)Materials scienceProcess (computing)Mechanical engineeringWeldingFixtureWelding Friction Solid state bonding Finite element method (FEM)law.inventionProcess conditionslawFriction weldingAxial forceSettore ING-IND/16 - Tecnologie E Sistemi Di LavorazioneSofteningMaterials & Design
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The global cracking laws for a finite-element model of no-tension material

1992

Abstract For perfect no-tension materials (NRT) the validity of the local stability postulate of Drucker, well known in plasticity, has been assumed so far and utilized to derive the local cracking laws, which relate cracking strain states and stress states to each other. On this base a finite-element (FE) model with suitable constitutive behaviour for the single FE is presented. Classical FE approaches enforce the cracking laws at the Gauss points of the FEs. In this work it is shown that taking into account cracking strains, suitably modelled, over the whole domain of the FE and making use of an energy approach lead to general cracking laws describing the constitutive behaviour of the who…

Work (thermodynamics)Materials scienceTension (physics)business.industryApplied MathematicsMechanical EngineeringFracture mechanicsPlasticityMasonryFinite element methodStress (mechanics)CrackingMechanics of MaterialsLawbusinessInternational Journal of Non-Linear Mechanics
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Wall collision and drug-carrier detachment in dry powder inhalers: Using DEM to devise a sub-scale model for CFD calculations

2018

Abstract In this work, the Discrete Element Method (DEM) is used to simulate the dispersion process of Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (API) after a wall collision in dry powders inhaler used for lung delivery. Any fluid dynamic effects are neglected in this analysis at the moment. A three-dimensional model is implemented with one carrier particle (diameter 100 μm) and 882 drug particles (diameter 5 μm). The effect of the impact velocity (varied between 1 and 20 m s−1), angle of impact (between 5° and 90°) and the carrier rotation (±100,000 rad s−1) are investigated for both elastic and sticky walls. The dispersion process shows a preferential area of drug detachment located in the southe…

Work (thermodynamics)Materials sciencebusiness.industryGeneral Chemical Engineering02 engineering and technologyMechanicsComputational fluid dynamics021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyRotation030226 pharmacology & pharmacyDiscrete element method03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineFluid dynamicsParticle0210 nano-technologyDispersion (chemistry)businessScale modelPowder Technology
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Comparison of 2D versus 3D diffusion analysis at Nanowire Electrodes: Finite element analysis and experimental study

2021

In electroanalysis, finite element simulations of electrochemical processes occurring at electrodes are used to provide key insight into experimental design in relation to diffusion profiles and expected currents. The diffusion domain approach (DDA) offers a means of reducing a three dimensional design to two dimensions to ease computational demands. However, the DDA approach can be limited when basic assumptions, for example that all electrodes in an array are equivalent, are incorrect. Consequently, to get a more realistic view of molecular diffusion to nanoelectrodes, it is necessary to undertake simulations in 3D. In this work, two and three dimensional models of electrodes comprising o…

Work (thermodynamics)Molecular diffusionMaterials scienceElectrodeNanowireDiffusion (business)ElectrochemistryDivergence (statistics)Molecular physicsFinite element method
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Isotopic variation of parity violation in atomic ytterbium: Description of the measurement method and analysis of systematic effects

2019

We present a detailed description of experimental studies of the parity violation effect in an isotopic chain of atomic ytterbium (Yb), whose results were reported in a recent paper [Antypas et al., Nat. Phys. 15, 120 (2019)]. We discuss the principle of these measurements, made on the Yb $6{s}^{2} {}^{1}{S}_{0}\ensuremath{\rightarrow}5d6s ^{3}D_{1}$ optical transition at 408 nm, describe the experimental apparatus, and give a detailed account of our studies of systematic effects in the experiment. Our results offer a direct observation of the isotopic variation in the atomic parity violation effect, a variation which is in agreement with the prediction of the standard model. These measurem…

YtterbiumPhysicsMeasurement methodchemistryOptical transitionDirect observationchemistry.chemical_elementParity (physics)Atomic physicsBosonPhysical Review A
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