2,888,300 research outputs found
Reversible plasticity in amorphous materials
A fundamental assumption in our understanding of material rheology is that
when microscopic deformations are reversible, the material responds elastically
to external loads. Plasticity, i.e. dissipative and irreversible macroscopic
changes in a material, is assumed to be the consequence of irreversible
microscopic events. Here we show direct evidence for reversible plastic events
at the microscopic scale in both experiments and simulations of two-dimensional
foam. In the simulations, we demonstrate a link between reversible plastic
rearrangement events and pathways in the potential energy landscape of the
system. These findings represent a fundamental change in our understanding of
materials--microscopic reversibility does not necessarily imply elasticity.Comment: Revised pape
Predictability of catastrophic events: material rupture, earthquakes, turbulence, financial crashes and human birth
We propose that catastrophic events are "outliers" with statistically
different properties than the rest of the population and result from mechanisms
involving amplifying critical cascades. Applications and the potential for
prediction are discussed in relation to the rupture of composite materials,
great earthquakes, turbulence and abrupt changes of weather regimes, financial
crashes and human parturition (birth).Comment: Latex document of 22 pages including 6 ps figures, in press in PNA
Diverse Supernova Sources for the r-Process
(Abridged) It is shown that a semi-quantitative agreement with the gross
solar r-process abundance pattern near and above mass number A=130 can be
obtained by a superposition of two distinctive kinds of supernova r-process
events. These correspond to a low frequency case L and a high frequency case H,
which takes into account the low abundance of I129 and the high abundance of
Hf182 in the early solar nebula. The lifetime of Hf182 associates the events in
case H with the most common Type II supernovae. These events would be mainly
responsible for the r-process nuclei near and above A=195. They would also make
a significant amount of the nuclei between A=130 and 195, including Hf182, but
very little I129. In order to match the solar r-process abundance pattern and
to satisfy the I129 and Hf182 constraints, the events in case L, which would
make the r-process nuclei near A=130 and the bulk of those between A=130 and
195, must occur 10 times less frequently but eject 10--20 times more r-process
material in each event. We speculate that the usual neutron star remnants, and
hence prolonged ejection of r-process material, are associated with the events
in case L, whereas the more frequently occurring events in case H have ejection
of other r-process material terminated by black hole formation during the
neutrino cooling phase of the protoneutron star.Comment: 23 pages, AAS LATEX, 8 Postscript figure
3D Simulation of Partial Discharge in High Voltage Power Networks
Open accessPartial discharge (PD) events arise inside power cables due to defects of cable’s insulation material, characterized by a lower electrical breakdown strength than the surrounding dielectric material. These electrical discharges cause signals to propagate along the cable, manifesting as noise phenomena. More significantly, they contribute to insulation degradation and can produce a disruptive effect with a consequent interruption of power network operation. PD events are, therefore, one of the best ‘early warning’ indicators of insulation degradation and, for this reason, the modeling and studying of such phenomena, together with the development of on-line PDs location methods, are important topics for network integrity assessment, and to define methods to improve the power networks’ Electricity Security. This paper presents a 3D model of PD events inside a void in epoxy-resin insulation cables for High Voltage (HV) power networks. The 3D model has been developed using the High Frequency (HF) Solver of CST Studio Suite® software. PD events of a few µs duration have been modelled and analyzed. The PD behavior has been investigated using varying electrical stress. A first study of the PD signal propagation in a power network is described
Slow flows of yield stress fluids: complex spatio-temporal behaviour within a simple elasto-plastic model
A minimal athermal model for the flow of dense disordered materials is
proposed, based on two generic ingredients: local plastic events occuring above
a microscopic yield stress, and the non-local elastic release of the stress
these events induce in the material. A complex spatio-temporal rheological
behaviour results, with features in line with recent experimental observations.
At low shear rates, macroscopic flow actually originates from collective
correlated bursts of plastic events, taking place in dynamically generated
fragile zones. The related correlation length diverges algebraically at small
shear rates. In confined geometries bursts occur preferentially close to the
walls yielding an intermittent form of flow localization.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Coarse-grained description of localized inelastic deformation in amorphous metals
The sequence of shear transformation events that lead to a shear band transition in amorphous metals is described by a spatially random coarse-grained model calibrated to obey the thermodynamic scaling relations that govern flow in a real glass. The model demonstrates that shear banding is a consequence of local shear transformation events that self-organize along planes of maximum resolved shear stress to form extended bands of highly localized deformation. This description suggests that shear band formation is incipient during the early stages of deformation of a randomly inhomogeneous material
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