24 research outputs found

    Fluctuation-based fracture mechanics of heterogeneous materials

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    We present results of a hybrid analytical-simulation investigation of the fracture resistance of heterogeneous materials. We show that bond-energy fluctuations sampled by Monte Carlo simulations in the semigrand canonical ensemble provide a means to rationalize the complexity of heterogeneous fracture processes, encompassing probability and percolation theories of fracture. For a number of random and textured model materials, we derive upper and lower bounds of fracture resistance and link bond fracture fluctuations to statistical descriptors of heterogeneity, such as two-point correlation functions, to identify the origin of toughening mechanisms. This includes a shift from short- to long-range interactions of bond fracture processes in random systems to the transition from critical to subcritical bond fracture percolation in textured materials and the activation of toughness reserves at compliant interfaces. Induced by elastic mismatch, they connect to a number of disparate experimental observations, including toughening of brittle solids by deformable polymers or organics in, e.g., gas shale, nacre; stress-induced transformational toughening in ceramics; and toughening of sparse elastic networks in hydrogels, to name a few

    Adsorption of selenium wires in silicalite-1 zeolite: a first order transition in a microporous system

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    peer reviewedA tight binding grand canonical Monte Carlo simulation of the adsorption of selenium in silicalite-1 zeolite is presented. The calculated adsorption-desorption isotherms exhibit characteristic features of a first order transition, unexpected for adsorption in a microporous system with pore size of the order of 0.5 to 0.6 nm. We analyze this behavior as a result of the favored twofold coordinated chain structure of selenium that grows inside the complex three-dimensional microchannel network of silicalite. This analysis is confirmed by simpler calculations of a lattice gas-type mode

    Hydration Kinetics and Gel Morphology of C-S-H

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    C-S-H across Length Scales: From Nano to Micron

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    Despite their impact on longevity, serviceability, and environmental footprint of our built infrastructure, the chemo-physical origins of nanoscale properties of cementitious materials, and their link to macroscale properties still remain rather obscure. Here, we discuss a multi-scale approach that describes different aspects of physical properties of C-S-H at the nano- and meso-scales. These include dynamics of water, thermal properties and mechanical behavior of C-S-H and its effect on properties of cement paste at different scales

    The Meso-Scale Texture of Cement Hydrate Gels: Out-of-Equilibrium Evolution and Thermodynamic Driving

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    By the end of cement hydration calcium-silicate-hydrate (C-S-H) gels extends over tens and hundreds of nanometers. Their complex texture affects directly, and to a large extent, the macroscopic hygrothermal and mechanical behavior of cement. Here we review a statistical physics approach recently developed, which allows us to investigate the gel formation under the out-of-equilibrium conditions typical of cement hydration and the role of the nano-scale structure in C - S - H mechanics upon hardening. Our investigations have unveiled the role, in the C-S-H gels, of nano-scale structural and mechanical heterogeneities that develop due to the the far-from-equilibrium physico-chemical environment in which the material forms. A subtle interplay between the out-of-equilibrium evolution and the effective interactions emerging between the nano-scale units of the gels at different stages of the hydration process ultimately determines the mesoscale texture of cement hydrates and their material properties
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