562 research outputs found
Slow and fast motion of cracks in inelastic solids. Part 1: Slow growth of cracks in a rate sensitive tresca solid. Part 2: Dynamic crack represented by the Dugdale model
An extension is proposed of the classical theory of fracture to viscoelastic and elastic-plastic materials in which the plasticity effects are confined to a narrow band encompassing the crack front. It is suggested that the Griffith-Irwin criterion of fracture, which requires that the energy release rate computed for a given boundary value problem equals the critical threshold, ought to be replaced by a differential equation governing the slow growth of a crack prior to the onset of rapid propagation. A new term which enters the equation of motion in the dissipative media is proportional to the energy lost within the end sections of the crack, and thus reflects the extent of inelastic behavior of a solid. A concept of apparent surface energy is introduced to account for the geometry dependent and the rate dependent phenomena which influence toughness of an inelastic solid. Three hypotheses regarding the condition for fracture in the subcritical range of load are compared. These are: (1) constant fracture energy (Cherepanov), (2) constant opening displacement at instability (Morozov) and (3) final stretch criterion (Wnuk)
Delayed fracture in viscoelastic-plastic solids
Delayed fracture in viscoelastic-plastic solids - assessment of load carrying ability of glass-like polymers having potential applications as structural material
Механіка уповільненого руйнування в'язкопружних і пластичних тіл
Effects of two parameters on enhancement of the time-dependent fracture manifested by a slow stable crack propagation that precedes catastrophic failure in ductile materials have been studied. One of these parameters is related to the material ductility ρ, and the other describes the geometry (roughness) of crack surface and is measured by the degree of fractality represented by the fractal exponent α, or – equivalently – by the Hausdorff fractal dimension D for a self-similar crack. These studies of early stages of ductile fracture are preceded by a brief summary of modeling the phenomenon of delayed fracture in polymeric materials, sometimes referred to as “creep rupture”. Despite different physical mechanisms involved in the preliminary stable crack extension and despite different mathematical representations, a remarkable similarity of the end results pertaining to the two phenomena of slow crack growth (SCG) that occur either in viscoelastic or in ductile media has been demonstrated.Досліджуються ефекти двох параметрів тривалості руйнування, яке характеризується повільним, стабільним поширенням тріщини, що передує катастрофічниму руйнуванню пластичних матеріалів. Один з цих параметрів пов'язаний з пластичністю матеріалу ρ, а інший - описує геометрію (шорсткість) поверхні тріщини і визначається ступенем фрактальності, що оцінюється фрактальним показником α, або, рівнозначно, фрактальним показником Гаусдорфа D для автомодельної тріщини. Цим дослідженням ранніх стадій пластичного руйнування передує короткий виклад моделювання явища уповільненого руйнування в полімерних матеріалах, яке іноді називають «повзучим розривом». Незважаючи на різні фізичні механізми, які реалізуються при попередньому стабільному поширенні тріщин, демонструється подібність отриманих результатів, що відносяться до явищ повільного поширення тріщини (ППТ), що виникають у в’язкопружних або пластичних тіла
Prior-to-failure extension of flaws under monotonic and pulsating loadings: Inelastic fatigue
An equation governing the prior to failure crack propagation is proposed. For a rate-sensitive solid containing two-dimensional crack and subject to the tensile mode of fracture, the differential equations are integrated numerically for the loads increasing monotonically in time. The resulting integral curves sigma = sigma(l) and l = l(t), i.e. load vs. crack length and length vs. time, indicate that the growth of cracks in the subcritical range is strongly rate dependent. The fatigue growth, viewed as a sequence of slow growth periods, is simulated on an EAI 380 analogue computer. The fourth power law proposed by Paris is confirmed only within a certain range of high-cycle fatigue propagation and for a rate-insensitive solid. For a more pronounced rate dependency, induced by the viscosity of a solid and/or in the proximity of the final instability point, the growth is markedly enhanced
Metal-insulator transition in Ca_{1-x}Li_xPd_3O_4
Metal-insulator transition in Ca_{1-x}Li_xPd_3O_4 has been studied through
charge transport measurements. The resistivity, the Seebeck coefficient, and
the Hall coefficient are consistently explained in terms of a simple one-band
picture, where a hole with a moderately enhanced mass is itinerant
three-dimensionally. Contrary to the theoretical prediction [Phys. Rev. B62,
13426 (2000)], CaPd_3O_4 is unlikely to be an excitonic insulator, and holds a
finite carrier concentration down to 4.2 K. Thus the metal-insulator transition
in this system is basically driven by localization effects.Comment: RevTeX4 format, 4 pages, 5 eps figure
Full 3D modelling of pulse propagation enables efficient nonlinear frequency conversion with low energy laser pulses in a single-element tripler
Although new optical materials continue to open up access to more and more wavelength bands where femtosecond laser pulses can be generated, light frequency conversion techniques are still indispensable in filling the gaps on the ultrafast spectral scale. With high repetition rate, low pulse energy laser sources (oscillators) tight focusing is necessary for a robust wave mixing and the efficiency of broadband nonlinear conversion is limited by diffraction as well as spatial and temporal walk-off. Here we demonstrate a miniature third harmonic generator (tripler) with conversion efficiency exceeding 30%, producing 246 fs UV pulses via cascaded second order processes within a single laser beam focus. Designing this highly efficient and ultra compact frequency converter was made possible by full 3-dimentional modelling of propagation of tightly focused, broadband light fields in nonlinear and birefringent media
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Gas-Phase Synthesis of Triphenylene (C18 H12 ).
For the last decades, the hydrogen-abstraction-acetylene-addition (HACA) mechanism has been widely invoked to rationalize the high-temperature synthesis of PAHs as detected in carbonaceous meteorites (CM) and proposed to exist in the interstellar medium (ISM). By unravelling the chemistry of the 9-phenanthrenyl radical ([C14 H9 ]. ) with vinylacetylene (C4 H4 ), we present the first compelling evidence of a barrier-less pathway leading to a prototype tetracyclic PAH - triphenylene (C18 H12 ) - via an unconventional hydrogen abstraction-vinylacetylene addition (HAVA) mechanism operational at temperatures as low as 10 K. The barrier-less, exoergic nature of the reaction reveals HAVA as a versatile reaction mechanism that may drive molecular mass growth processes to PAHs and even two-dimensional, graphene-type nanostructures in cold environments in deep space thus leading to a better understanding of the carbon chemistry in our universe through the untangling of elementary reactions on the most fundamental level
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