7,138 research outputs found

    Repeatable pre-cracking preparation for fracture testing of polymeric materials

    Get PDF
    Currently, in order to create a sharp pre-crack in a polymeric material for fracture toughness testing, a hand-held razor blade is used. This technique produces cracks of varying angle, length, and crack-front shape. Additionally, there are considerable safety concerns regarding the handling of sharp razor blades. A repeatable, safe method of producing a consistent, sharp pre-crack of a specified length, orientation and crack front is presented here, by use of a simple custom fixture. The specimen preparation procedure has wide applicability for fracture analysis of many brittle materials

    Velocity weakening and possibility of aftershocks in nanofriction experiments

    Full text link
    We study the frictional behavior of small contacts as those realized in the atomic force microscope and other experimental setups, in the framework of generalized Prandtl-Tomlinson models. Particular attention is paid to mechanisms that generate velocity weakening, namely a decreasing average friction force with the relative sliding velocity.The mechanisms studied model the possibility of viscous relaxation, or aging effects in the contact. It is found that, in addition to producing velocity weakening, these mechanisms can also produce aftershocks at sufficiently low sliding velocities. This provides a remarkable analogy at the microscale, of friction properties at the macroscale, where aftershocks and velocity weakening are two fundamental features of seismic phenomena.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure

    Optical Conductivity in a Two-Band Superconductor: Pb

    Full text link
    We demonstrate the effect of bandstructure on the superconducting properties of Pb by calculating the strong-coupling features in the optical conductivity, σ(ω)\sigma(\omega), due to the electron-phonon interaction. The importance of momentum dependence in the calculation of the properties of superconductors has previously been raised for MgB2_2. Pb resembles MgB2_2 in that it is a two band superconductor in which the bands' contributions to the Fermi surface have very different topologies. We calculate σ(ω)\sigma(\omega) by calculating a memory function which has been recently used to analyze σ(ω)\sigma(\omega) of Bi2_2Sr2_2CaCu2_2O8+δ_{8+\delta}. In our calculations the two components of the Fermi surface are described by parameterizations of de Haas--van Alphen data. We use a phonon spectrum which is a fit to neutron scattering data. By including the momentum dependence of the Fermi surface good agreement is found with the experimentally determined strong-coupling features which can be described by a broad peak at around 4.5 meV and a narrower higher peak around 8 meV of equal height. The calculated features are found to be dominated by scattering between states within the third band. By contrast scattering between states in the second band leads to strong-coupling features in which the height of the high energy peak is reduced by 50\sim 50% compared to that of the low energy peak. This result is similar to that in the conventional isotropic (momentum independent) treatment of superconductivity. Our results show that it is important to use realistic models of the bandstructure and phonons, and to avoid using momentum averaged quantities, in calculations in order to get quantitatively accurate results

    Place-Based Industrial and Regional Strategy – Levelling the Playing Field

    Get PDF
    Over the past decade there has been renewed interest in the role of industrial strategy in enhancing innovation, productivity, and competitiveness within and across firms, sectors and regions with an eye to fostering more balanced regional economic growth. This special issue explores how policymakers could adopt place-based industrial policy measures to foster regional catch up and a more balanced and cohesive regional growth. In doing so, the papers are a mix of contributions that develop theory, provide evidence and highlight ‘state of the art’ or good practice that can inform a level playing field fostering regional industrial strategy.</p

    Dynamics of Phononic Dissipation at the Atomic Scale: Dependence on Internal Degrees of Freedom

    Get PDF
    Dynamics of dissipation of a local phonon distribution to the substrate is a key issue in friction between sliding surfaces as well as in boundary lubrication. We consider a model system consisting of an excited nano-particle which is weakly coupled with a substrate. Using three different methods we solve the dynamics of energy dissipation for different types of coupling between the nano-particle and the substrate, where different types of dimensionality and phonon densities of states were also considered for the substrate. In this paper, we present our analysis of transient properties of energy dissipation via phonon discharge in the microscopic level towards the substrate. Our theoretical analysis can be extended to treat realistic lubricant molecules or asperities, and also substrates with more complex densities of states. We found that the decay rate of the nano-particle phonons increases as the square of the interaction constant in the harmonic approximation.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Transitions between phyllotactic lattice states in curved geometries

    Get PDF
    corecore