16,207 research outputs found
A constitutive model for an overlay coating
Coatings are frequently applied to gas turbine blades and vanes to provide protection against oxidation and corrosion. The results of an experimental and analytical study to develop a constitutive model for an overlay coating is presented. Specimens were machined from a hot isostatically pressed billet of PWA 286. The tests consisted of isothermal stress relaxation cycles with monotonically increasing maximum strain and were conducted at various temperatures. The results were used to calculate the constants for various constitutive models, including the classical, the Walker isotropic, a simplified Walker, and Stowell models. A computerized regression analysis was used to calculate model constants from the data. The best fit was obtained for the Walker model, with the simplified Walker and classical models close behind
Dynamics and Decay of Heavy-Light Hadrons
Recent signals for narrow hadrons containing heavy and light flavours are
compared with quark model predictions for spectroscopy, strong decays, and
radiative transitions. In particular, the production and identification of
excited charmed and cs states are examined with emphasis on elucidating the
nature of and states. Roughly 200 strong decay amplitudes of
and states up to 3.3 GeV are presented. Applications include determining
flavour content in mesons and the mixing angle in and wave
states and probes of putative molecular states. We advocate searching for
radially excited states in B decays.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures, revtex. A numerical error is corrected. Some
strong decay rates have change
Modelling DNA Response to THz Radiation
Collective response of DNA to THz electric fields is studied in a simple pair
bond model. We confirm, with some caveats, a previous observation of
destabilising DNA breather modes and explore the parameter-dependence of these
modes. It is shown that breather modes are eliminated under reasonable physical
conditions and that thermal effects are significant.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. version to appear in Phys. Rev.
High temperature constitutive and crack initiation modeling of coated single crystal superalloys
The purpose of this program is to develop life prediction models for anisotropic materials used in gas turbine airfoils. In the base portion of the program, two coated single crystal alloys are being tested. They are PWA 286 overlay coated and PWA 273 aluminide coated PWA 1480 and PWA 286 overlay coated Alloy 185. Viscoplastic constitutive models for these materials are also being developed to predict the cyclic stress-strain histories required for life prediction of the lab specimens and actual airfoil designs
Notched fatigue of single crystal PWA 1480 at turbine attachment temperatures
The focus is on the lower temperature, uncoated and notched features of gas turbine blades. Constitutive and fatigue life prediction models applicable to these regions are being developed. Fatigue results are presented which were obtained thus far. Fatigue tests are being conducted on PWA 1480 single crystal material using smooth strain controlled specimens and three different notched specimens. Isothermal fatigue tests were conducted at 1200, 1400, and 1600 F. The bulk of the tests were conducted at 1200 F. The strain controlled tests were conducted at 0.4 percent per second strain rate and the notched tests were cycled at 1.0 cycle per second. A clear orientation dependence is observed in the smooth strain controlled fatigue results. The fatigue lifes of the thin, mild notched specimens agree fairly well with this smooth data when elastic stress range is used as a correlating parameter. Finite element analyses were used to calculate notch stresses. Fatigue testing will continue to further explore the trends observed thus far. Constitutive and life prediction models are being developed
Life prediction and constitutive models for engine hot section
The purpose of this program is to develop life prediction models for coated anisotropic materials used in gas turbine airfoils. In the program, two single crystal alloys and two coatings are being tested. These include PWA 1480, Alloy 185, overlay coating (PWA 286), and aluminide coating (PWA 273). Constitutive models are also being developed for these materials to predict the time independent (plastic) and time dependent (creep) strain histories of the materials in the lab tests and for actual design conditions. This nonlinear material behavior is particularly important for high temperature gas turbine applications and is basic to any life prediction system. Some of the accomplishments of the program are highlighted
Coupling hydrophobic, dispersion, and electrostatic contributions in continuum solvent models
Recent studies of the hydration of micro- and nanoscale solutes have
demonstrated a strong {\it coupling} between hydrophobic, dispersion and
electrostatic contributions, a fact not accounted for in current implicit
solvent models. We present a theoretical formalism which accounts for coupling
by minimizing the Gibbs free energy with respect to a solvent volume exclusion
function. The solvent accessible surface is output of our theory. Our method is
illustrated with the hydration of alkane-assembled solutes on different length
scales, and captures the strong sensitivity to the particular form of the
solute-solvent interactions in agreement with recent computer simulations.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure
Friction factors for smooth pipe flow
Friction factor data from two recent pipe flow experiments are combined to provide a comprehensive picture of the friction factor variation for Reynolds numbers from 10 to 36,000,000
- …