370,385 research outputs found
Fracture toughness and crack-resistance curve behavior in metallic glass-matrix composites
Nonlinear-elastic fracture mechanics methods are used to assess the fracture toughness of bulk metallic glass (BMG) composites; results are compared with similar measurements for other monolithic and composite BMG alloys. Mechanistically, plastic shielding gives rise to characteristic resistance-curve behavior where the fracture resistance increases with crack extension. Specifically, confinement of damage by second-phase dendrites is shown to result in enhancement of the toughness by nearly an order of magnitude relative to unreinforced glass
Thermal shock testing for assuring reliability of glass-sealed microelectronic packages
Tests were performed to determine if thermal shocking is destructive to glass-to-metal seal microelectronic packages and if thermal shock step stressing can compare package reliabilities. Thermal shocking was shown to be not destructive to highly reliable glass seals. Pin-pull tests used to compare the interfacial pin glass strengths showed no differences between thermal shocked and not-thermal shocked headers. A 'critical stress resistance temperature' was not exhibited by the 14 pin Dual In-line Package (DIP) headers evaluated. Headers manufactured in cryogenic nitrogen based and exothermically generated atmospheres showed differences in as-received leak rates, residual oxide depths and pin glass interfacial strengths; these were caused by the different manufacturing methods, in particular, by the chemically etched pins used by one manufacturer. Both header types passed thermal shock tests to temperature differentials of 646 C. The sensitivity of helium leak rate measurements was improved up to 70 percent by baking headers for two hours at 200 C after thermal shocking
Measurements of the Rate Capability of Various Resistive Plate Chambers
Resistive Plate Chambers (RPCs) exhibit a significant loss of efficiency for
the detection of particles, when subjected to high particle fluxes. This rate
limitation is related to the usually high resistivity of the resistive plates
used in their construction. This paper reports on measurements of the
performance of three different glass RPC designs featuring a different total
resistance of the resistive plates. The measurements were performed with 120
GeV protons at varying beam intensitie
Observation of a superconducting glass state in granular superconducting diamond
The magnetic field dependence of the superconductivity in nanocrystalline
boron doped diamond thin films is reported. Evidence of a glass state in the
phase diagram is presented, as demonstrated by electrical resistance and
magnetic relaxation measurements. The position of the phase boundary in the H-T
plane is determined from resistance data by detailed fitting to
zero-dimensional fluctuation conductivity theory. This allows determination of
the boundary between resistive and non-resistive behavior to be made with
greater precision than the standard ad hoc onset/midpoint/offset criterion
Electrical Resistance Tomography of Conductive Thin Films
The Electrical Resistance Tomography (ERT) technique is applied to the
measurement of sheet conductance maps of both uniform and patterned conductive
thin films. Images of the sheet conductance spatial distribution, and local
conductivity values are obtained. Test samples are tin oxide films on glass
substrates, with electrical contacts on the sample boundary, some samples are
deliberately patterned in order to induce null conductivity zones of known
geometry while others contain higher conductivity inclusions. Four-terminal
resistance measurements among the contacts are performed with a scanning setup.
The ERT reconstruction is performed by a numerical algorithm based on the total
variation regularization and the L-curve method. ERT correctly images the sheet
conductance spatial distribution of the samples. The reconstructed conductance
values are in good quantitative agreement with independent measurements
performed with the van der Pauw and the four-point probe methods.Comment: IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measuremen
Unusual magneto-transport of YBa2Cu3O7-d films due to the interplay of anisotropy, random disorder and nanoscale periodic pinning
We study the general problem of a manifold of interacting elastic lines whose
spatial correlations are strongly affected by the competition between random
and ordered pinning. This is done through magneto-transport experiments with
YBa2Cu3O7-d thin films that contain a periodic vortex pinning array created via
masked ion irradiation, in addition to the native random pinning. The strong
field-matching effects we observe suggest the prevalence of periodic pinning,
and indicate that at the matching field each vortex line is bound to an
artificial pinning site. However, the vortex-glass transition dimensionality,
quasi-2D instead of the usual 3D, evidences reduced vortex-glass correlations
along the vortex line. This is also supported by an unusual angular dependence
of the magneto-resistance, which greatly differs from that of Bose-glass
systems. A quantitative analysis of the angular magnetoresistance allows us to
link this behaviour to the enhancement of the system anisotropy, a collateral
effect of the ion irradiation
Ageing effects around the glass and melting transitions in poly(dimethylsiloxane) visualized by resistance measurements
The process of ageing in rubbers requires monitoring over long periods (days
to years). To do so in non-conducting rubbers, small amounts of carbon-black
particles were dispersed in a fractal network through the rubber matrix, to
make the rubber conducting without modifying its properties. Continuous
monitoring of the resistance reveals the structural changes around the glass
and melting transitions and especially details about the hysteresis and ageing
processes. We illustrate the method for the semicrystalline polymer
poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS).Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
A broadband microwave Corbino spectrometer at He temperatures and high magnetic fields
We present the technical details of a broadband microwave spectrometer for
measuring the complex conductance of thin films covering the range from 50 MHz
up to 16 GHz in the temperature range 300 mK to 6 K and at applied magnetic
fields up to 8 Tesla. We measure the complex reflection from a sample
terminating a coaxial transmission line and calibrate the signals with three
standards with known reflection coefficients. Thermal isolation of the heat
load from the inner conductor is accomplished by including a section of NbTi
superconducting cable (transition temperature around 8 9 K) and hermetic
seal glass bead adapters. This enables us to stabilize the base temperature of
the sample stage at 300 mK. However, the inclusion of this superconducting
cable complicates the calibration procedure. We document the effects of the
superconducting cable on our calibration procedure and the effects of applied
magnetic fields and how we control the temperature with great repeatability for
each measurement. We have successfully extracted reliable data in this
frequency, temperature and field range for thin superconducting films and
highly resistive graphene samples
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