71 research outputs found

    Aspekte der Modellierung des Tragverhaltens von Textilbeton unter biaxialer Beanspruchung

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    Zur Bemessung und Simulation von flächigen Textilbetonstrukturen werden Berechnungsmodelle benötigt, die das Materialverhalten unter biaxialer Beanspruchung abbilden können. Für eindimensionale Strukturen existieren einige Modelle, zu deren Weiterentwicklung eine Erweiterung zur Abbildung des biaxialen Materialverhaltens vorgeschlagen wird. In diesem Beitrag werden die notwendigen Erweiterungen und deren Umsetzbarkeit bei der Modellierung diskutiert und bewertet.For design and simulation of plane textile reinforced concrete structures mechanical models representing the material behaviour under biaxial loading are necessary. For one-dimensional structures several models were presented in the past. For their further development an extension for biaxial material behaviour is usually proposed. In this paper the required extensions are discussed and their feasibility for modelling is assessed

    Numerische Simulation des mechanischen Verhaltens von Textilbeton unter Berücksichtigung mehrerer Strukturebenen

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    The failure mechanisms of textile reinforced concrete (TRC), which is a composite of bundles of long fibers and fine concrete, are complex. Most important for the ductility is the successive debonding of the fibers from the surrounding matrix when the brittle matrix is cracking. Therefore, one of the main issues is the simulation of the bond behavior between the reinforcement and the matrix. By introducing a hierarchical material model for TRC the mechanical behavior is simulated by means of representative volume elements modelled on the meso scale. Finite element analysis is used to determine the effective properties of TRC within a periodic homogenization framework. Further, a multiscale finite element technique is suggested, where constitutive equation are formulated only on the meso level

    Imaging Shock Waves in Diamond with Both High Temporal and Spatial Resolution at an XFEL

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    The advent of hard x-ray free-electron lasers (XFELs) has opened up a variety of scientific opportunities in areas as diverse as atomic physics, plasma physics, nonlinear optics in the x-ray range and protein crystallography. In this article, we access a new field of science by measuring quantitatively the local bulk properties and dynamics of matter under extreme conditions, in this case by using the short XFEL pulse to image an elastic compression wave in diamond. The elastic wave was initiated by an intense optical laser pulse and was imaged at different delay times after the optical pump pulse using magnified x-ray phase-contrast imaging. The temporal evolution of the shock wave can be monitored, yielding detailed information on shock dynamics, such as the shock velocity, the shock front width and the local compression of the material. The method provides a quantitative perspective on the state of matter in extreme conditions

    Self-consistent Spectral Function for Non-Degenerate Coulomb Systems and Analytic Scaling Behaviour

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    Novel results for the self-consistent single-particle spectral function and self-energy are presented for non-degenerate one-component Coulomb systems at various densities and temperatures. The GW^0-method for the dynamical self-energy is used to include many-particle correlations beyond the quasi-particle approximation. The self-energy is analysed over a broad range of densities and temperatures (n=10^17/cm^3-10^27/cm^3, T=10^2 eV/k_B-10^4 eV/k_B). The spectral function shows a systematic behaviour, which is determined by collective plasma modes at small wavenumbers and converges towards a quasi-particle resonance at higher wavenumbers. In the low density limit, the numerical results comply with an analytic scaling law that is presented for the first time. It predicts a power-law behaviour of the imaginary part of the self-energy, Im Sigma ~ -n^(1/4). This resolves a long time problem of the quasi-particle approximation which yields a finite self-energy at vanishing density.Comment: 28 pages, 9 figure

    The Matter in Extreme Conditions instrument at the Linac Coherent Light Source

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    The LCLS beam provides revolutionary capabilities for studying the transient behavior of matter in extreme conditions. The particular strength of the Matter in Extreme Conditions instrument is that it combines the unique LCLS beam with high-power optical laser beams, and a suite of dedicated diagnostics tailored for this field of science. In this paper an overview of the beamline, the capabilities of the instrumentation, and selected highlights of experiments and commissioning results are presented

    The Speed of Sound in Methane under Conditions of the Thermal Boundary Layer of Uranus

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    We present the first direct observations of acoustic waves in warm dense matter. We analyze wavenumber- and energy-resolved X-ray spectra taken from warm dense methane created by laser-heating a cryogenic liquid jet. X-ray diffraction and inelastic free electron scattering yield sample conditions of 0.3±\pm0.1 eV and 0.8±\pm0.1 g/cm3^3, corresponding to a pressure of \sim13 GPa and matching the conditions predicted in the thermal boundary layer between the inner and outer envelope of Uranus. Inelastic X-ray scattering was used to observe the collective oscillations of the ions. With a highly improved energy resolution of \sim50 meV, we could clearly distinguish the Brillouin peaks from the quasi-elastic Rayleigh feature. Data at different wavenumbers were used to obtain a sound speed of 5.9±\pm0.5 km/s, which enabled us to validate the use of Birch's law in this new parameter regime.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures with supplementary informatio

    Electron-ion temperature relaxation in warm dense hydrogen observed with picosecond resolved X-Ray scattering

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    Angularly resolved X-ray scattering measurements from fs-laser heated hydrogen have been used to determine the equilibration of electron and ion temperatures in the warm dense matter regime. The relaxation of rapidly heated cryogenic hydrogen is visualized using 5.5 keV X-ray pulses from the Linac Coherent Light (LCLS) source in a 1 Hz repetition rate pump-probe setting. We demonstrate that the electron-ion energy transfer is faster than quasi-classical Landau-Spitzer models that use ad hoc cutoffs in the Coulomb logarithm

    Analityczny opis właściwości kompozytów wzmacnianych włóknami poddanych obciążeniom zmiennym

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    In many real-world applications, such as in civil engineering, non-periodic composite materials are used, whose dynamical behaviour is still not deeply understood, especially concerning its wave scattering properties. In this paper, the scattering of a transient non-plane elastic SH wave by an arbitrary arrangement of identical multi-layered and thus inhomogeneous obstacles is investigated. The obstacles are embedded in a homogeneous, isotropic, and linear elastic matrix of infinite extent. The solution procedure is analytical and will then be evaluated numerically for investigating a small material clipping of a real-world problem.W rzeczywistych obiektach, np. w inżynierii lądowej, zastosowanie znajdują materiały kompozytowe o strukturze nieperiodycznej. Dynamika takich elementów nadal pozostaje niedostatecznie rozpoznana, zwłaszcza w kontekście właściwości rozpraszania fal. W prezentowanej pracy omówiono problem rozpraszania przejściowych, niepłaskich fal sprężystości spolaryzowanych poziomo (typu SH) w dowolnym układzie identycznych, wielowarstwowych, i przez to niejednorodnych, ekranów tłumiących. Założono, że ekrany te zostały wbudowane w jednorodną, izotropową, liniowo-sprężystą osnowę o nieskończenie wielkich rozmiarach. Zaproponowano analityczne rozwiązanie problemu, które posłuży symulacjom numerycznym efektu słabego obcinania fali w materiale wybranego obiektu rzeczywistego
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