Search results for "elasticity"
showing 10 items of 736 documents
Liver stiffness, a non-invasive marker of liver disease: a core study group report
2010
The ability to evaluate liver stiffness non-invasively in clinical practice by measuring transient elastography using FibroScan® has resulted in considerable interest and enthusiasm. A core study group, organized by the Italian Association for the Study of the Liver, has assessed the usefulness of FibroScan® in the diagnosis and management of liver disease in clinical practice. The group concluded that FibroScan® is a valuable, non-invasive technique and have developed a consensus report form for registering transient elastography results. In this article, we report the findings of the study group.
Irreversibility of the pressure-induced phase transition of quartz and the relation between three hypothetical post-quartz phases
2004
Our atomistic computer simulations mainly based on classical force fields suggest that the pressure-induced transition from $\ensuremath{\alpha}$ quartz to quartz II at $21\phantom{\rule{0.3em}{0ex}}\mathrm{GPa}$ is irreversible. While quartz II is ferroelastic in principle, the transition itself is coelastic, as the shape of the newly formed crystal is determined by the handedness of $\ensuremath{\alpha}$-quartz. Upon releasing the pressure, our model quartz II remains stable down to $5\phantom{\rule{0.3em}{0ex}}\mathrm{GPa}$, where it undergoes an isosymmetric transformation into a less dense polymorph. If the classical force field model of quartz II is compressed quickly to $50\phantom{\…
Core-Shell Microgels with Switchable Elasticity at Constant Interfacial Interaction.
2016
Hydrogels based on poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (pNIPAAm) exhibit a thermo-reversible volume phase transition from swollen to deswollen states. This change of the hydrogel volume is accompanied by changes of the hydrogel elastic and Young's moduli and of the hydrogel interfacial interactions. To decouple these parameters from one another, we present a class of submillimeter sized hydrogel particles that consist of a thermosensitive pNIPAAm core wrapped by a nonthermosensitive polyacrylamide (pAAm) shell, each templated by droplet-based microfluidics. When the microgel core deswells upon increase of the temperature to above 34 °C, the shell is stretched and dragged to follow this deswelling i…
Can Hyperbranched Polymers Entangle? Effect of Hydrogen Bonding on Entanglement Transition and Thermorheological Properties of Hyperbranched Polyglyc…
2016
Melt rheology and thermal phase transition of a series of hyperbranched polyglycerol samples (hbPG) (DB ≈ 60%) in a broad molecular weight range (Mn = 600–440 000 g/mol) were investigated and correlated to both molecular weight and nature of the end group (hydroxyl vs permethylated and trimethylsilylated). The well-characterized and defined flexible polyethers are particularly suitable to shed light on the linear viscoelastic behavior with respect to (i) hyperbranched topology and (ii) hydrogen bond interactions, particularly in comparison to the perfectly linear polyglycerol counterparts studied recently [Osterwinter, C.; Macromolecules 2015, 48, 119−130]. We present a detailed examination…
Grafted Rods: A Tilting Phase Transition
1996
A tilting phase transition is predicted for systems comprising rod like molecules which are irreversibly grafted to a flat surface, so that the non interacting rods are perpendicularly oriented. The transition is controlled by the grafting density $\rho$. It occurs as $\rho$ increases as a result of the interplay between two energies. Tilt is favoured by the van-der-Waals attraction between the rods. It is opposed by the bending elasticity of the grafting functionality. The role of temperature is discussed, and the tilting mechanism is compared to other tilting transitions reported in the literature.
Measurement of edge residual stresses in glass by the phase-shifting method
2011
Abstract Control and measurement of residual stress in glass is of great importance in the industrial field. Since glass is a birefringent material, the residual stress analysis is based mainly on the photoelastic method. This paper considers two methods of automated analysis of membrane residual stress in glass sheets, based on the phase-shifting concept in monochromatic light. In particular these methods are the automated versions of goniometric compensation methods of Tardy and Senarmont. The proposed methods can effectively replace manual methods of compensation (goniometric compensation of Tardy and Senarmont, Babinet and Babinet–Soleil compensators) provided by current standards on th…
Review of RGB photoelasticity
2015
Abstract Automatic methods of photoelasticity have had a significant progress with the development of automatic acquisition and image processing methods. This article concerns RGB photoelasticity, which allows the determination of the photoelastic retardation using, usually, a single acquisition of the isochromatic fringes in white light by a colour camera. In particular, the article presents an overview of the main characteristics of RGB photoelasticity that is influence of the quarter-wave plate error, number of acquisitions, type of light source, determination of low and high fringe orders, methods for searching the retardation, scanning procedures, calibration on a material different fr…
Full-field automatic evaluation of an isoclinic parameter in white light
1997
In this paper, a technique for full-field evaluation of the isoclinic parameter is presented. It combines the phase-shifting method with true color imaging technology to minimize the interaction between isoclinic and isochromatic fringes. The paper also shows how the proposed technique can be suitably integrated with known methods for evaluating the retardations. Furthermore, a digital algorithm for filtering wrapped phase data obtained by general phase-shifting techniques is presented.
Ultrasonic Guided Wave Inspection of Bonded Lap Joints: Noncontact Method and Photoelastic Visualization
2001
The main topic of this paper is the nondestructive inspection of adhesively bonded lap joints by using ultrasonic guided (plate) waves. A noncontact, couplant-free method that employs capacitive air-coupled transducers is demonstrated for the inspection of thin aluminum joints with dimensions typical of aircraft fuselage and wing panels. Two types of bond defects, disbonded regions and regions of poorly cured (low-cohesive-strength) adhesive, are successfully detected by measuring the amplitude decrease of selected plate waves leaking from one adherend to the other one through the bondline. It is shown that proper choice of the vibrating mode structure, in terms of cross-sectional displacem…
Developments in RGB photoelasticity
2006
In this paper the combined use of both RGB and phase stepping photoelasticity is proposed. The method is characterised by the following features: maximum measurable order greater than that of the RGB method, ability to determine the total fringe order without necessity of unwrapping.