5 research outputs found
Multiphysics analysis of state changes during progressive damage of composite materials
For advanced heterogeneous materials in many applications, material state changes occur during service. The evolution of local details (damage initiation, accumulation, growth, and interaction) controls the progress of global property degradation, and they control the development of the final fracture event, i.e., the life of the engineering component. Traditional damage analysis approaches focus on the detection and location of flaws and defects, not on interactions or relationships between flaws or on the general change of state of the material. However, the changes in stiffness, thermal and electrical conductivity, dielectric permittivity, and structural integrity as a function of those properties are essential information. Therefore, a definitive definition and understanding of the multiphysics changes at the material level is needed. Because creation of a single microscopic crack or other distributed events does not directly affect the strength or life of the composite materials, what is needed is a method of integrating material state changes over the history of events associated with a specific history of applied fields into methodology for predicting remaining strength, stiffness, and life. The approach discussed in this article is founded on the method of Reifsnider, et al., as codified in his text on “Damage Tolerance and Durability of Material Systems” (Wiley, 2003), and on subsequent developments associated with the Energy Frontier Research Center on Heterogeneous Functional Materials led by the University of South Carolina (www.HeteroFoaM.com). As a result of capabilities developed in connection with the HeteroFoaM center, a multiphysics capability has been developed for prognosis in the presence of progressive damage. One of the most interesting aspects of that work is the “generalized compliance method” in which electrical (or thermal) conductivity, dielectric permittivity, and mechanical state variables are tracked and predicted as a method of assessing changes in material and structural integrity for progressive damage. As it happens, the relationship between changes in conduction, for example, and dielectric permittivity as a function of nonconservative deformation history is not linear and must be predicted from first principles solutions to the correct set of multiphysics equations. We have successfully illustrated this capability for polymer-based composites. We will discuss this and other details of this multidisciplinary approach
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The Development of Low-Cost Integrated Composite Seal for SOFC: Materials and Design Methodologies
This report summarizes the work conducted by UConn SOFC seal development team during the Phase I program and no cost extension. The work included composite seal sample fabrication, materials characterizations, leak testing, mechanical strength testing, chemical stability study and acoustic-based diagnostic methods. Materials characterization work revealed a set of attractive material properties including low bulk permeability, high electrical resistivity, good mechanical robustness. Composite seal samples made of a number of glasses and metallic fillers were tested for sealing performance under steady state and thermal cycling conditions. Mechanical testing included static strength (pull out) and interfacial fracture toughness measurements. Chemically stability study evaluated composite seal material stability after aging at 800 C for 168 hrs. Acoustic based diagnostic test was conducted to help detect and understand the micro-cracking processes during thermal cycling test. The composite seal concept was successfully demonstrated and a set of material (coating composition & fillers) were identified to have excellent thermal cycling performance
A Model for Materials Databases
We present a model for materials data, using terminology and concepts from the database community, to define the complexity and needs which materials data impose on database technology. Many terms are defined so that the model can be used by materials scientists. The intent of the model is to build a bridge between these two disciplines, since current technology has not adequately served the community which needs computerized access to materials data. 1. INTRODUCTION The need to make information about materials engineering rapidly available to researchers and designers of advanced materials, has grown exceptionally fast during the last decade. Unfortunately, because of the extraordinarily broad domain of materials data, materials engineers are finding it difficult to acquire reliable, up-to-date test data on newly developed composites. This yet inadequately addressed need has brought about the invention o new software and hardware technology designed specifically to fit the requiremen..