2,679 research outputs found
Macroscopic fe-simulation of residual stresses in thermo-mechanically processed steels considering phase transformation effects
Residual stresses are an important issue as they affect both the manufacturing processes as well as the performance of the final parts. Taking into account the whole process chain of hot forming, the integrated heat treatment provided by a defined temperature profile for cooling of the parts offers a great potential for the targeted adjustment of the desired residual stress state. However, in addition to elastic, plastic and linear thermal strain components, the complex material phenomena arising from phase transformation effects of the polymorphic steels have to be considered in order to predict the residual stresses. These transformation strains account for the plastic deformation at the phase boundary between the emerging and the parent phase. In addition, they are strongly related to the transformation induced plasticity (TRIP) phenomena which depend on the stress state. The aim of this study is the investigation of TRIP effects and their impact on residual stresses regarding the typical hot forming steels 1.7225 (DIN: 42CrMo4) and 1.3505 (DIN: 100Cr6) by means of an experimental-numerical approach. The TRIP behaviour of the materials under consideration is integrated into an FE simulation model in the commercial software Simufact.forming for the purpose of residual stress prediction. The experimental thermo-mechanical investigations are carried out using a quenching and forming dilatometer. These experiments are numerically modelled by means of FEM which allows TRIP coefficients to be determined phasespecifically by numerical identification. For validation of the improved FE-model, an experimental thermo-mechanical reference process is considered, in which cylindrical specimens with an eccentric hole are hot formed and subsequently cooled by different temperature routes. Finally, the numerical model is validated by means of a comparison between residual stress states determined with X-ray diffraction and predicted residual stresses from the simulation
Determining source cumulants in femtoscopy with Gram-Charlier and Edgeworth series
Lowest-order cumulants provide important information on the shape of the
emission source in femtoscopy. For the simple case of noninteracting identical
particles, we show how the fourth-order source cumulant can be determined from
measured cumulants in momentum space. The textbook Gram-Charlier series is
found to be highly inaccurate, while the related Edgeworth series provides
increasingly accurate estimates. Ordering of terms compatible with the Central
Limit Theorem appears to play a crucial role even for nongaussian
distributions.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure
Model independent analysis of nearly L\'evy correlations
A model-independent method for the analysis of the two-particle short-range
correlations is presented, that can be utilized to describe e.g. Bose-Einstein
(HBT), dynamical (ridge) or other correlation functions, that have a nearly
L\'evy or streched exponential shape. For the special case of L\'evy exponent
alpha = 1, the earlier Laguerre expansions are recovered, for the alpha = 2
special case, a new expansion method is obtained for nearly Gaussian
correlation functions. Multi-dimensional L\'evy expansions are also introduced
and their potential application to analyze rigde correlation data is discussed
Rapid deconvolution of low-resolution time-of-flight data using Bayesian inference
The deconvolution of low-resolution time-of-flight data has numerous advantages, including the ability to extract additional information from the experimental data. We augment the well-known Lucy-Richardson deconvolution algorithm using various Bayesian prior distributions and show that a prior of second-differences of the signal outperforms the standard Lucy-Richardson algorithm, accelerating the rate of convergence by more than a factor of four, while preserving the peak amplitude ratios of a similar fraction of the total peaks. A novel stopping criterion and boosting mechanism are implemented to ensure that these methods converge to a similar final entropy and local minima are avoided. Improvement by a factor of two in mass resolution allows more accurate quantification of the spectra. The general method is demonstrated in this paper through the deconvolution of fragmentation peaks of the 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid matrix and the benzyltriphenylphosphonium thermometer ion, following femtosecond ultraviolet laser desorption
Interaction-induced chiral p_x \pm i p_y superfluid order of bosons in an optical lattice
The study of superconductivity with unconventional order is complicated in
condensed matter systems by their extensive complexity. Optical lattices with
their exceptional precision and control allow one to emulate superfluidity
avoiding many of the complications of condensed matter. A promising approach to
realize unconventional superfluid order is to employ orbital degrees of freedom
in higher Bloch bands. In recent work, indications were found that bosons
condensed in the second band of an optical chequerboard lattice might exhibit
p_x \pm i p_y order. Here we present experiments, which provide strong evidence
for the emergence of p_x \pm i p_y order driven by the interaction in the local
p-orbitals. We compare our observations with a multi-band Hubbard model and
find excellent quantitative agreement
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