11,759 research outputs found

    <i>In situ</i> observation of strain and phase transformation in plastically deformed 301 austenitic stainless steel

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    To inform the design of superior transformation-induced plasticity (TRIP) steels, it is important to understand what happens at the microstructural length scales. In this study, strain-induced martensitic transformation is studied by in situ digital image correlation (DIC) in a scanning electron microscope. Digital image correlation at submicron length scales enables mapping of transformation strains with high confidence. These are correlated with electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) prior to and post deformation process to get a comprehensive understanding of the strain-induced transformation mechanism. The results are compared with mathematical models for enhanced prediction of strain-induced martensitic phase transformation

    Methods of measuring residual stresses in components

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    Residual stresses occur in many manufactured structures and components. Large number of investigations have been carried out to study this phenomenon and its effect on the mechanical characteristics of these components. Over the years, different methods have been developed to measure residual stress for different types of components in order to obtain reliable assessment. The various specific methods have evolved over several decades and their practical applications have greatly benefited from the development of complementary technologies, notably in material cutting, full-field deformation measurement techniques, numerical methods and computing power. These complementary technologies have stimulated advances not only in measurement accuracy and reliability, but also in range of application; much greater detail in residual stresses measurement is now available. This paper aims to classify the different residual stresses measurement methods and to provide an overview of some of the recent advances in this area to help researchers on selecting their techniques among destructive, semi destructive and non destructive techniques depends on their application and the availabilities of those techniques. For each method scope, physical limitation, advantages and disadvantages are summarized. In the end this paper indicates some promising directions for future developments

    Living Liquid Crystals

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    Collective motion of self-propelled organisms or synthetic particles often termed active fluid has attracted enormous attention in broad scientific community because of it fundamentally non-equilibrium nature. Energy input and interactions among the moving units and the medium lead to complex dynamics. Here we introduce a new class of active matter, living liquid crystals (LLCs) that combine living swimming bacteria with a lyotropic liquid crystal. The physical properties of LLCs can be controlled by the amount of oxygen available to bacteria, by concentration of ingredients, or by temperature. Our studies reveal a wealth of new intriguing dynamic phenomena, caused by the coupling between the activity-triggered flow and long-range orientational order of the medium. Among these are (a) non-linear trajectories of bacterial motion guided by non-uniform director, (b) local melting of the liquid crystal caused by the bacteria-produced shear flows, (c) activity-triggered transition from a non-flowing uniform state into a flowing one-dimensional periodic pattern and its evolution into a turbulent array of topological defects, (d) birefringence-enabled visualization of microflow generated by the nanometers-thick bacterial flagella. Unlike their isotropic counterpart, the LLCs show collective dynamic effects at very low volume fraction of bacteria, on the order of 0.2%. Our work suggests an unorthodox design concept to control and manipulate the dynamic behavior of soft active matter and opens the door for potential biosensing and biomedical applications.Comment: 32 pages, 8 figures, Supporting Information include

    Real-space observation of short-period cubic lattice of skyrmions in MnGe

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    Emergent phenomena and functions arising from topological electron-spin textures in real space or momentum space are attracting growing interest for new concept of states of matter as well as for possible applications to spintronics. One such example is a magnetic skyrmion, a topologically stable nanoscale spin vortex structure characterized by a topological index. Real-space regular arrays of skyrmions are described by combination of multi-directional spin helixes. Nanoscale configurations and characteristics of the two-dimensional skyrmion hexagonal-lattice have been revealed extensively by real-space observations. Other three-dimensional forms of skyrmion lattices, such as a cubic-lattice of skyrmions, are also anticipated to exist, yet their direct observations remain elusive. Here we report real-space observations of spin configurations of the skyrmion cubic-lattice in MnGe with a very short period (~3 nm) and hence endowed with the largest skyrmion number density. The skyrmion lattices parallel to the {100} atomic lattices are directly observed using Lorentz transmission electron microscopes (Lorentz TEMs). It enables the first simultaneous observation of magnetic skyrmions and underlying atomic-lattice fringes. These results indicate the emergence of skyrmion-antiskyrmion lattice in MnGe, which is a source of emergent electromagnetic responses and will open a possibility of controlling few-nanometer scale skyrmion lattices through atomic lattice modulations

    Ultrasonic biaxial stress measurement for evaluating the adequacy of gusset plates

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    The collapse of the I-35W bridge in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on August 1, 2007, resulted in the deaths of 13 people. In an investigation conducted by the National Transportation Safety Board, the cause of the collapse was determined to be the failure of an overstressed steel gusset plate which connected key members of the structure. Following the collapse, State Departments of Transportation sought to confirm the adequacy of gusset plates in other bridges to ensure overstressed gusset plates were not present. Total stresses in a gusset plate cannot be effectively determined using conventional tools such as strain gages. The goal of this research was to improve the safety of steel truss highway bridges by developing an ultrasonic stress measurement methodology for determining total stress in steel gusset plates. A methodology was developed and assessed based on the results of laboratory testing in which the accuracy and precision of ultrasonic stress measurements for a biaxial stress condition were evaluated. This research utilized the acoustoelastic effect to evaluate total stress levels by assessing the acoustic birefringence in steel. The birefringence measurement evaluates normalized variations of polarized shear waves propagating through the plate thickness; these shear waves vary proportionally as a function of stress. A sine regression technique was applied to measure the desired birefringence parameters. Testing results indicated stress measurement uncertainties of 2,600 psi (12.5% of the shear yield strength) or less. This study demonstrated the potential of the sine regression technique to accurately and repeatedly assess total stress levels in steel gusset plates

    Speaker gender, child age, syntax, and the prosody of parentese

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    Parentese is the speech-language register adults switch to when talking to children. It regulates arousal, communicates affect, and its segment-marking prosody is thought to facilitate language learning. This "didactic prosody" is studied in 57 male and female parentese speakers addressing to children aged between 1 month and 5 years
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