683 research outputs found
Explicit equations for leak rates through narrow cracks
Explicit equations to describe the leak rate of a single phase fluid through a narrow crack under a low pressure gradient have been developed and are presented. Four distinct flow regimes, which change with crack opening displacement, have been previously identified and are the basis of this model. The fluid flow is governed by the pressure gradient and the tortuosity of the crack, which is particularly important when the opening displacement is small. The equations have been developed by considering the pressure forces created when the fluid flows down an idealized zig-zag channel. The nature of the flow, and hence the governing equations, change as the crack aperture increases. The power of this approach is clearly seen when the flow rates predicted using this model are compared both to the flow rates obtained from computational fluid dynamics analysis and those found by experimentation. The agreement between these sets of data is good, showing that the major effects governing the flow rate have been identified and then accounted for
T-stress determination using thermoelastic stress analysis
T-stress and mixed-mode stress intensity factors have been determined experimentally using thermoelastic stress analysis and using a finite element method. Pure mode I, strong mixed-mode I and II, and interacting cracks have been used as the case studies. A new technique has been proposed to identify the crack tip from thermoelastic images. It has also been shown that using three terms of Williams's stress field formulation to determine the T-stress, yields a more accurate solution than using only the first two terms of the expansion
Strain Evolution Measurement at the Microscale of a Dual Phase Steel Using Digital Image Correlation
Digital Image Correlation (DIC) together with in-situ tensile testing has been used to measure in DP1000 steel the evolution of plastic strains at the microstructure scale. Interrupted tensile tests were performed on specially designed samples and scanning-electron micrographs were taken at regular applied strain intervals. Patterns defined by the microstructural features of the material have been used for the correlation carried out using LAVision software. The full field strain maps produced by DIC show a progressive localisation of deformation into bands at about 45o with respect to the loading direction. Plastic strains as high as 130% have been measured within the ferrite phase
Near tip strain evolution under cyclic loading
The concept of ratchetting strain as a crack driving force in controlling crack growth has previouslybeen explored at Portsmouth using numerical approaches for nickel-based superalloys. In this paper, we reportthe first experimental observations of the near-tip strain evolution as captured by the Digital Image Correlation(DIC) technique on a compact tension specimen of stainless steel 316L. The evolution of the near-tip strainswith loading cycles was studied whilst the crack tip was maintained stationary. The strains were monitored overthe selected distances from the crack tip for a given number of cycles under an incremental loading regime. Theresults show that strain ratchetting does occur with load cycling, and is particularly evident close to the crack tipand under higher loads. A finite element model has been developed to simulate the experiments and thesimulation results are compared with the DIC measurements
Living Plants in Hawaii Attacked by Coptotermes formosanus
Forty-seven species of living plants in 27 families were found infested by Coptotermes formosanus Shiraki in Hawaii. The symptoms caused by the infestations were dependent on the mode of attack. Although an actual value was not placed on the economic losses caused by the attacks, evidence indicates that the losses are substantial
Determination of micro-scale plastic strain caused by orthogonal cutting
An electron beam lithography technique has been used to produce microgrids in order to measure local plastic strains, induced during an orthogonal cutting process, at the microscopic scale in the shear zone and under the machined surface. Microgrids with a 10 μm pitch and a line width less than 1 μm have been printed on the polished surface of an aluminium alloy AA 5182 to test the applicability of the technique in metal cutting operations. Orthogonal cutting tests were carried out at 40 mm/s. Results show that the distortion of the grids could successfully be used to compute plastic strains due to orthogonal cutting with higher accuracy compared to other techniques reported in the literature. Strain maps of the machined specimens have been produced and show high-strain gradients very close to the machined surface with local values reaching 2.2. High-resolution strain measurements carried out in the primary deformation zone also provide new insight into the material deformation during the chip formation process
Crack paths under mixed mode loading
Long fatigue cracks that initially experience mixed mode displacements usually change direction in response to cyclic elastic stresses. Eventually the cracks tend to orient themselves into a pure mode I condition, but the path that they take can be complex and chaotic. In this paper, we report on recent developments in techniques for tracking the crack path as it grows and evaluating the strength of the mixed mode crack tip stress field
Global aggregation of newly translated proteins in an Escherichia coli strain deficient of the chaperonin GroEL
Comparison of Spectra in Unsequenced Species
International audienceWe introduce a new algorithm for the mass spectromet- ric identication of proteins. Experimental spectra obtained by tandem MS/MS are directly compared to theoretical spectra generated from pro- teins of evolutionarily closely related organisms. This work is motivated by the need of a method that allows the identication of proteins of unsequenced species against a database containing proteins of related organisms. The idea is that matching spectra of unknown peptides to very similar MS/MS spectra generated from this database of annotated proteins can lead to annotate unknown proteins. This process is similar to ortholog annotation in protein sequence databases. The difficulty with such an approach is that two similar peptides, even with just one mod- ication (i.e. insertion, deletion or substitution of one or several amino acid(s)) between them, usually generate very dissimilar spectra. In this paper, we present a new dynamic programming based algorithm: Packet- SpectralAlignment. Our algorithm is tolerant to modications and fully exploits two important properties that are usually not considered: the notion of inner symmetry, a relation linking pairs of spectrum peaks, and the notion of packet inside each spectrum to keep related peaks together. Our algorithm, PacketSpectralAlignment is then compared to SpectralAlignment [1] on a dataset of simulated spectra. Our tests show that PacketSpectralAlignment behaves better, in terms of results and execution tim
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