193 research outputs found
Photoelastic force measurements in granular materials
Photoelastic techniques are used to make both qualitative and quantitative
measurements of the forces within idealized granular materials. The method is
based on placing a birefringent granular material between a pair of polarizing
filters, so that each region of the material rotates the polarization of light
according to the amount of local of stress. In this review paper, we summarize
past work using the technique, describe the optics underlying the technique,
and illustrate how it can be used to quantitatively determine the vector
contact forces between particles in a 2D granular system. We provide a
description of software resources available to perform this task, as well as
key techniques and resources for building an experimental apparatus
Determination of the characteristic directions of lossless linear optical elements
We show that the problem of finding the primary and secondary characteristic
directions of a linear lossless optical element can be reformulated in terms of
an eigenvalue problem related to the unimodular factor of the transfer matrix
of the optical device. This formulation makes any actual computation of the
characteristic directions amenable to pre-implemented numerical routines,
thereby facilitating the decomposition of the transfer matrix into equivalent
linear retarders and rotators according to the related Poincare equivalence
theorem. The method is expected to be useful whenever the inverse problem of
reconstruction of the internal state of a transparent medium from optical data
obtained by tomographical methods is an issue.Comment: Replaced with extended version as published in JM
Local stress measurement using the thermoelastic effect
A technique for measuring local stresses in metallic specimens is proposed and tested. The technique depends on the experimental measurement of temperature changes in stressed members due to adiabatic elastic deformation. At a free boundary in a body under plane stress, these temperature changes are directly related to the value of the tangential principal stress. The technique is suited for measurement of stress-concentration effects, since the temperature changes can be measured with thermocouples featuring extremely small junctions.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/43937/1/11340_2006_Article_BF02326342.pd
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NACA Technical Notes
"Factors of stress concentration for deep, sharp, and symmetrically arranged grooves and fillets in tension members have been determined photoelastically and are given in this report. Curves are given showing the distribution of principal stresses on the section through the grooves. Complete isopachic patterns for several basic cases of grooved bars are included" (p. 1)
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