ASU Electronic Theses and Dissertations
This collection includes most of the ASU Theses and Dissertations from 2011 to present. ASU Theses and Dissertations are available in downloadable PDF format; however, a small percentage of items are under embargo. Information about the dissertations/theses includes degree information, committee members, an abstract, supporting data or media.
In addition to the electronic theses found in the ASU Digital Repository, ASU Theses and Dissertations can be found in the ASU Library Catalog.
Dissertations and Theses granted by Arizona State University are archived and made available through a joint effort of the ASU Graduate College and the ASU Libraries. For more information or questions about this collection contact or visit the Digital Repository ETD Library Guide or contact the ASU Graduate College at gradformat@asu.edu.
- Oswald, Jay
- 34 Arizona State University
- 13 Jiang, Hanqing
- 11 Liu, Yongming
- 11 Solanki, Kiran
- 8 Peralta, Pedro
- 6 Rajan, Subramaniam
- more
- 5 Mignolet, Marc
- 4 Jiao, Yang
- 4 Rajagopalan, Jagannathan
- 3 Mignolet, Marc P
- 2 Chamberlin, Ralph
- 2 Chattopadhyay, Aditi
- 2 Chawla, Nikhilesh
- 2 Chen, Kangping
- 2 Loomis, Eric
- 2 Sieradzki, Karl
- 1 Agrawal, Vipin
- 1 Ayyar, Adarsh
- 1 Badwe, Nilesh Umesh
- 1 Bhate, Dhruv
- 1 Burgin, Timothy
- 1 Chandra, Aman
- 1 Chandrasekhar, Vishal
- 1 Chen, Hailong
- 1 Chong, Brian
- 1 Darling, Timothy Karl
- 1 Dooley, Kevin
- 1 Fortin, Elizabeth Victoria
- 1 Frakes, David
- 1 Galan Vera, Magdian Ulises
- 1 Gautam, Sudrishti
- 1 Herrmann, Marcus
- 1 Herrmann, Mrcus
- 1 Huang, Huei Ping
- 1 Huang, Huei-Ping
- 1 Izadi, Ehsan
- 1 Jain, Gaurav
- 1 Krishnan, Kapil
- 1 Kwon, Beomjin
- 1 Li, Yiyang
- 1 Liao, Xiao
- 1 Lin, Jinshan
- 1 Liu, Minghao
- 1 Mahajan, Ravi
- 1 Mignolet, Marc Paul
- 1 Muhich, Christopher
- 1 Muthuswamy, Jitendran
- 1 Opie, Saul
- 1 Panwar, Ajay
- 1 Patel, Jay K.
- 1 Peet, Yulia
- 1 Peralta, Pedro D
- 1 Phadnis, Akshay
- 1 Platte, Rodrigo
- 1 Rajarajan, Santhosh Kiran
- 1 Ren, Yi
- 1 Rykaczewski, Konrad
- 1 Rykczewski, Konrad
- 1 Safarkhani, Salar
- 1 Sahoo, Saurav
- 1 Shah, Shrinil
- 1 Sharma, Raghav
- 1 Sodano, Henry A
- 1 Song, Pengchao
- 1 Speyer, Gil
- 1 Spottswood, Stephen
- 1 Spottswood, Stephen M
- 1 Tahir, Fraaz
- 1 Thangavelautham, Jekanthan
- 1 Veeresh, Pawan Manjunath
- 1 Venkatesan, Karthik Rajan
- 1 Wang, Liping
- 1 Wang, Robert
- 1 Wang, Yuting
- 1 Wei, Haoyang
- 1 Yadollahi Farsani, Hooman
- 1 Yuan, Rui
- 1 Zope, Jayesh Vishnu
- 34 Public
- Mechanical engineering
- 7 Materials Science
- 5 Mechanics
- 4 Engineering
- 3 Fracture
- 3 Reduced Order Model
- 2 Aerospace engineering
- more
- 2 Finite Element Analysis
- 2 Instability
- 2 J-integral
- 2 MEMS
- 2 Polymer
- 2 fracture
- 2 life prediction
- 2 polyurea
- 1 ACOM
- 1 Anisotropic Materials
- 1 Antanna
- 1 Behavior
- 1 Bicrystal
- 1 Biomechanics
- 1 Bladed Disks
- 1 Cavitation
- 1 Cavitation erosion
- 1 Coarse-Grained models
- 1 Coating
- 1 Cobalt
- 1 Cohesive zone model
- 1 Composite
- 1 Composite material
- 1 Computational chemistry
- 1 Computational solid mechanics
- 1 Computer science
- 1 Constitutive Behavior
- 1 Constitutive model
- 1 Copper
- 1 Creep
- 1 Crystal Plasticity
- 1 CubeSat
- 1 Damage
- 1 Deployable
- 1 Digital Image Correlation
- 1 Dislocations
- 1 Dynamic
- 1 Dynamics
- 1 Elasticity
- 1 Event Detection
- 1 Extended finite element
- 1 Extended finite element method
- 1 FEA
- 1 Film Induced Cleavage
- 1 Football Helmet
- 1 Gain
- 1 Geometrically Nonlinear
- 1 Geometry representation
- 1 Geometry segmentation
- 1 Grain Boundary
- 1 Hydrodynamic
- 1 In-situ TEM
- 1 Inclusions
- 1 Inflatable
- 1 Large deformation
- 1 Lattice Spring Model
- 1 Limit Cycle Oscillation
- 1 Material
- 1 Mechanical Engineering
- 1 Mechanical Properties
- 1 Mechanical behavior
- 1 Microstructurally explicit finite element model
- 1 Microstructure
- 1 Mistuning
- 1 Molecular chemistry
- 1 Multi-Bay Structures
- 1 NLROM
- 1 Nano-mechanical testing
- 1 Nanoporous Gold
- 1 Nanotechnology
- 1 Nonlinearity
- 1 Nonlocal Potential
- 1 Optimization
- 1 Peach-Koehler force
- 1 Physics
- 1 Pipe Conveying Fluid
- 1 Pipeline failure
- 1 Polycrystalline Materials
- 1 Polyethylene
- 1 Polymer chemistry
- 1 Polymers
- 1 Polyurea
- 1 Pressure
- 1 Probabilistic Model
- 1 Pulse Duration
- 1 Rigidization
- 1 Spallation
- 1 Strength
- 1 Stress Corrosion Cracking
- 1 Stress-Waves
- 1 Structural Dynamics
- 1 Systems science
- 1 Temperature
- Language in Trauma: A Pilot Study of Pause Frequency as a Predictor of Cognitive Change Due to Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
- Subvert City: The Interventions of an Anarchist in Occupy Phoenix, 2011-2012
- Exploring the Impact of Augmented Reality on Collaborative Decision-Making in Small Teams
- Towards a National Cinema: An Analysis of Caliwood Films by Luis Ospina and Carlos Mayolo and Their Fundamental Contribution to Colombian Film
- 国家集中采购试点政策对制药企业和制药产业的影响评估
Shock loading is a complex phenomenon that can lead to failure mechanisms such as strain localization, void nucleation and growth, and eventually spall fracture. Studying incipient stages of spall damage is of paramount importance to accurately determine initiation sites in the material microstructure where damage will nucleate and grow and to formulate continuum models that account for the variability of the damage process due to microstructural heterogeneity. The length scale of damage with respect to that of the surrounding microstructure has proven to be a key aspect in determining sites of failure initiation. Correlations have been found between the damage …
- Contributors
- Krishnan, Kapil, Peralta, Pedro, Mignolet, Marc, et al.
- Created Date
- 2013
A new critical plane-energy model is proposed in this thesis for multiaxial fatigue life prediction of homogeneous and heterogeneous materials. Brief review of existing methods, especially on the critical plane-based and energy-based methods, are given first. Special focus is on one critical plane approach which has been shown to work for both brittle and ductile metals. The key idea is to automatically change the critical plane orientation with respect to different materials and stress states. One potential drawback of the developed model is that it needs an empirical calibration parameter for non-proportional multiaxial loadings since only the strain terms are …
- Contributors
- Wei, Haoyang, Liu, Yongming, Jiang, Hanqing, et al.
- Created Date
- 2016
Owing to the surge in development of endovascular devices such as coils and flow diverter stents, doctors are inclined to approach surgical cases non-invasively more often than before. Treating brain aneurysms as a bulging of a weakened area of a blood vessel is no exception. Therefore, promoting techniques that can help surgeons have a better idea of treatment outcomes are of invaluable importance. In order to investigate the effects of these devices on intra-aneurysmal hemodynamics, the conventional computational fluid dynamics (CFD) approach uses the explicit geometry of the device within an aneurysm and discretizes the fluid domain to solve the …
- Contributors
- Yadollahi Farsani, Hooman, Herrmann, Marcus, Frakes, David, et al.
- Created Date
- 2018
Fracture phenomena have been extensively studied in the last several decades. Continuum mechanics-based approaches, such as finite element methods and extended finite element methods, are widely used for fracture simulation. One well-known issue of these approaches is the stress singularity resulted from the spatial discontinuity at the crack tip/front. The requirement of guiding criteria for various cracking behaviors, such as initiation, propagation, and branching, also poses some challenges. Comparing to the continuum based formulation, the discrete approaches, such as lattice spring method, discrete element method, and peridynamics, have certain advantages when modeling various fracture problems due to their intrinsic characteristics …
- Contributors
- Chen, Hailong, Liu, Yongming, Jiao, Yang, et al.
- Created Date
- 2015
A method for modelling the interactions of dislocations with inclusions has been developed to analyse toughening mechanisms in alloys. This method is different from the superposition method in that infinite domain solutions and image stress fields are not superimposed. The method is based on the extended finite element method (XFEM) in which the dislocations are modelled according to the Volterra dislocation model. Interior discontinuities are introduced across dislocation glide planes using enrichment functions and the resulting boundary value problem is solved through the standard finite element variational approach. The level set method is used to describe the geometry of the …
- Contributors
- Veeresh, Pawan Manjunath, Oswald, Jay, Jiang, Hanqing, et al.
- Created Date
- 2016
One of the fundamental aspects of cellular material design is cell shape selection. Of particular interest is how this selection can be made in the context of a realistic three-dimensional structure. Towards this goal, this work studied the stiffness response of periodic and stochastic lattice structures for the loading conditions of bending, torsion and tension/compression using commercially available lattice design optimization software. The goal of this computational study was to examine the feasibility of developing a ranking order based on minimum compliance or maximum stiffness for enabling cell selection. A study of stochastic shapes with different seeds was also performed. …
- Contributors
- Sharma, Raghav, Bhate, Dhruv, Oswald, Jay, et al.
- Created Date
- 2019
Cavitation erosion is a significant cause of wear in marine components, such as impellers, propellers or rudders. While the erosion process has been widely studied on metals, the effect of cavitation on polymers is not well-understood. The stress response in metals differs greatly from that of polymers, e.g. rate and temperature effects are far more important, thus damage and wear mechanisms of polymers under cavitating flows are significantly different. In this work, heat-driven failure caused by viscous dissipation and void nucleation resulting from tensile stresses arising from stress wave reflections are investigated as two possible material failure mechanisms. As a …
- Contributors
- Panwar, Ajay, Oswald, Jay, Dooley, Kevin, et al.
- Created Date
- 2015
Monte Carlo simulations are traditionally carried out for the determination of the amplification of forced vibration response of turbomachine/jet engine blades to mistuning. However, this effort can be computationally time consuming even when using the various reduced order modeling techniques. Accordingly, some investigations in the past have focused on obtaining simple approximate estimates for this amplification. In particular, two of these have proposed the use of harmonic patterns of the blade properties around the disk as an approximate alternative to the many random patterns of Monte Carlo analyses. These investigations, while quite encouraging, have relied solely on single degree of …
- Contributors
- Sahoo, Saurav, Mignolet, Marc Paul, Chattopadhyay, Aditi, et al.
- Created Date
- 2014
ABSTRACT A large fraction of the total energy consumption in the world comes from heating and cooling of buildings. Improving the energy efficiency of buildings to reduce the needs of seasonal heating and cooling is one of the major challenges in sustainable development. In general, the energy efficiency depends on the geometry and material of the buildings. To explore a framework for accurately assessing this dependence, detailed 3-D thermofluid simulations are performed by systematically sweeping the parameter space spanned by four parameters: the size of building, thickness and material of wall, and fractional size of window. The simulations incorporate realistic …
- Contributors
- Jain, Gaurav, Huang, Huei-Ping, Ren, Yi, et al.
- Created Date
- 2016
The Very High Temperature Reactor (VHTR) is one of six conceptual designs proposed for Generation IV nuclear reactors. Alloy 617, a solid solution strengthened Ni-base superalloy, is currently the primary candidate material for the tubing of the Intermediate Heat Exchanger (IHX) in the VHTR design. Steady-state operation of the nuclear power plant at elevated temperatures leads to creep deformation, whereas loading transients including startup and shutdown generate fatigue. A detailed understanding of the creep-fatigue interaction in Alloy 617 is necessary before it can be considered as a material for nuclear construction in ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code. Current design …
- Contributors
- Tahir, Fraaz, Liu, Yongming, Jiang, Hanqing, et al.
- Created Date
- 2017
Characterization and modeling of deformation and failure in metallic materials under extreme conditions, such as the high loads and strain rates found under shock loading due to explosive detonation and high velocity-impacts, are extremely important for a wide variety of military and industrial applications. When a shock wave causes stress in a material that exceeds the elastic limit, plasticity and eventually spallation occur in the material. The process of spall fracture, which in ductile materials stems from strain localization, void nucleation, growth and coalescence, can be caused by microstructural heterogeneity. The analysis of void nucleation performed from a microstructurally explicit …
- Contributors
- Gautam, Sudrishti, Peralta, Pedro, Oswald, Jay, et al.
- Created Date
- 2016
Hydrodynamic phenomena such as the Rayleigh-Taylor (RT) and Richtmyer-Meshkov (RM) instabilities can be described by exponential/linear growth of surface perturbations at a bimaterial interface when subjected to constant/impulsive acceleration. A challenge in designing systems to mitigate or exploit these effects is the lack of accurate material models at large dynamic strain rates and pressures. In particular, little stress-strain constitutive information at large strain rates and pressures is available for transient material phases formed at high pressures, and the continuum effect the phase transformation process has on the instability evolution. In this work, a phase-aware isotropic strength model is developed and …
- Contributors
- Opie, Saul, Peralta, Pedro, Loomis, Eric, et al.
- Created Date
- 2017
This investigation is focused on the consideration of structural uncertainties in nearly-straight pipes conveying fluid and on the effects of these uncertainties on the dynamic response and stability of those pipes. Of interest more specifically are the structural uncertainties which affect directly the fluid flow and its feedback on the structural response, e.g., uncertainties on/variations of the inner cross-section and curvature of the pipe. Owing to the complexity of introducing such uncertainties directly in finite element models, it is desired to proceed directly at the level of modal models by randomizing simultaneously the appropriate mass, stiffness, and damping matrices. The …
- Contributors
- Shah, Shrinil, Mignolet, Marc P, Liu, Yongming, et al.
- Created Date
- 2017
The objective of this research is to develop robust, accurate, and adaptive algorithms in the framework of the extended finite element method (XFEM) for fracture analysis of highly heterogeneous materials with complex internal geometries. A key contribution of this work is the creation of novel methods designed to automate the incorporation of high-resolution data, e.g. from X-ray tomography, that can be used to better interpret the enormous volume of data generated in modern in-situ experimental testing. Thus new algorithms were developed for automating analysis of complex microstructures characterized by segmented tomographic images. A centrality-based geometry segmentation algorithm was developed to …
- Contributors
- Yuan, Rui, Oswald, Jay, Chawla, Nikhilesh, et al.
- Created Date
- 2015
In this paper, at first, analytical formulation of J-integral for a non-local particle model (VCPM) using atomic scale finite element method is proposed for fracture analysis of 2D solids. A brief review of classical continuum-based J-integral and anon-local lattice particle method is given first. Following this, detailed derivation for the J-integral in discrete particle system is given using the energy equivalence and stress-tensor mapping between the continuum mechanics and lattice-particle system.With the help of atomistic finite element method, the J-integral is expressed as a summation of the corresponding terms in the particle system. Secondly, a coupling algorithm between a non-local …
- Contributors
- Zope, Jayesh Vishnu, Liu, Yongming, Oswald, Jay, et al.
- Created Date
- 2016
The football helmet is a device used to help mitigate the occurrence of impact-related traumatic (TBI) and minor traumatic brain injuries (mTBI) in the game of American football. The current design methodology of using a hard shell with an energy absorbing liner may be adequate for minimizing TBI, however it has had less effect in minimizing mTBI. The latest research in brain injury mechanisms has established that the current design methodology has produced a helmet to reduce linear acceleration of the head. However, angular accelerations also have an adverse effect on the brain response, and must be investigated as a …
- Contributors
- Darling, Timothy Karl, Rajan, Subramaniam, Muthuswamy, Jitendran, et al.
- Created Date
- 2014
This research examines several critical aspects of the so-called "film induced cleavage" model of stress corrosion cracking using silver-gold alloys as the parent-phase material. The model hypothesizes that the corrosion generates a brittle nanoporous film, which subsequently fractures forming a high-speed crack that is injected into the uncorroded parent-phase alloy. This high speed crack owing to its kinetic energy can penetrate beyond the corroded layer into the parent phase and thus effectively reducing strength of the parent phase. Silver-gold alloys provide an ideal system to study this effect, as hydrogen effect can be ruled out on thermodynamic basis. During corrosion …
- Contributors
- Badwe, Nilesh Umesh, Sieradzki, Karl, Peralta, Pedro, et al.
- Created Date
- 2014
CubeSats offer a compelling pathway towards lowering the cost of interplanetary exploration missions thanks to their low mass and volume. This has been possible due to miniaturization of electronics and sensors and increased efficiency of photovoltaics. Interplanetary communication using radio signals requires large parabolic antennas on the spacecraft and this often exceeds the total volume of CubeSat spacecraft. Mechanical deployable antennas have been proposed that would unfurl to form a large parabolic dish. These antennas much like an umbrella has many mechanical moving parts, are complex and are prone to jamming. An alternative are inflatables, due to their tenfold savings …
- Contributors
- Chandra, Aman, Thangavelautham, Jekanthan, Huang, Huei Ping, et al.
- Created Date
- 2015
Nanocrystalline (NC) and Ultrafine-grained (UFG) metal films exhibit a wide range of enhanced mechanical properties compared to their coarse-grained counterparts. These properties, such as very high strength, primarily arise from the change in the underlying deformation mechanisms. Experimental and simulation studies have shown that because of the small grain size, conventional dislocation plasticity is curtailed in these materials and grain boundary mediated mechanisms become more important. Although the deformation behavior and the underlying mechanisms in these materials have been investigated in depth, relatively little attention has been focused on the inhomogeneous nature of their microstructure (particularly originating from the texture …
- Contributors
- Izadi, Ehsan, Rajagopalan, Jagannathan, Peralta, Pedro, et al.
- Created Date
- 2017
Shock loading produces a compressive stress pulse with steep gradients in density, temperature, and pressure that are also often modeled as discontinuities. When a material is subject to these dynamic (shock) loading conditions, fracture and deformation patterns due to spall damage can arise. Spallation is a dynamic material failure that is caused by the nucleation, growth, and coalescence of voids, with possible ejection of the surface of the material. Intrinsic defects, such as grain boundaries are the preferred initiation sites of spall damage in high purity materials. The focus of this research is to study the phenomena that cause void …
- Contributors
- Fortin, Elizabeth Victoria, Peralta, Pedro, Mignolet, Marc, et al.
- Created Date
- 2020
With the advancements in technology, it is now possible to synthesize new materials with specific microstructures, and enhanced mechanical and physical properties. One of the new class of materials are nanoscale metallic multilayers, often referred to as nanolaminates. Nanolaminates are composed of alternating, nanometer-thick layers of multiple materials (typically metals or ceramics), and exhibit very high strength, wear resistance and radiation tolerance. This thesis is focused on the fabrication and mechanical characterization of nanolaminates composed of Copper and Cobalt, two metals which are nearly immiscible across the entire composition range. The synthesis of these Cu-Co nanolaminates is performed using sputtering, …
- Contributors
- Rajarajan, Santhosh Kiran, Rajagopalan, Jagannathan, Oswald, Jay, et al.
- Created Date
- 2019
Polymer matrix composites (PMCs) are attractive structural materials due to their high stiffness to low weight ratio. However, unidirectional PMCs have low shear strength and failure can occur along kink bands that develop on compression due to plastic microbuckling that carry strains large enough to induce nonlinear matrix deformation. Reviewing the literature, a large fraction of the existing work is for uniaxial compression, and the effects of stress gradients, such as those present during bending, have not been as well explored, and these effects are bound to make difference in terms of kink band nucleation and growth. Furthermore, reports on …
- Contributors
- Patel, Jay K., Peralta, Pedro D, Oswald, Jay, et al.
- Created Date
- 2016
Finite element simulations modeling the hydrodynamic impact loads subjected to an elastomeric coating were performed to develop an understanding of the performance and failure mechanisms of protective coatings for cavitating environments. In this work, two major accomplishments were achieved: 1) scaling laws were developed from hydrodynamic principles and numerical simulations to allow conversion of measured distributions of pressure peaks in a cavitating flow to distributions of microscopic impact loadings modeling individual bubble collapse events, and 2) a finite strain, thermo-mechanical material model for polyurea-based elastomers was developed using a logarithmic rate formulation and implemented into an explicit finite element code. …
- Contributors
- Liao, Xiao, Oswald, Jay, Liu, Yongming, et al.
- Created Date
- 2016
Polyurea is a highly versatile material used in coatings and armor systems to protect against extreme conditions such as ballistic impact, cavitation erosion, and blast loading. However, the relationships between microstructurally-dependent deformation mechanisms and the mechanical properties of polyurea are not yet fully understood, especially under extreme conditions. In this work, multi-scale coarse-grained models are developed to probe molecular dynamics across the wide range of time and length scales that these fundamental deformation mechanisms operate. In the first of these models, a high-resolution coarse-grained model of polyurea is developed, where similar to united-atom models, hydrogen atoms are modeled implicitly. This …
- Contributors
- Liu, Minghao, Oswald, Jay, Muhich, Christopher, et al.
- Created Date
- 2020
The exceptional mechanical properties of polymers with heterogeneous structure, such as the high toughness of polyethylene and the excellent blast-protection capability of polyurea, are strongly related to their morphology and nanoscale structure. Different polymer microstructures, such as semicrystalline morphology and segregated nanophases, lead to coordinated molecular motions during deformation in order to preserve compatibility between the different material phases. To study molecular relaxation in polyethylene, a coarse-grained model of polyethylene was calibrated to match the local structural variable distributions sampled from supercooled atomistic melts. The coarse-grained model accurately reproduces structural properties, e.g., the local structure of both the amorphous and …
- Contributors
- Li, Yiyang, Oswald, Jay, Rajan, Subramaniam, et al.
- Created Date
- 2017
The focus of this dissertation is first on understanding the difficulties involved in constructing reduced order models of structures that exhibit a strong nonlinearity/strongly nonlinear events such as snap-through, buckling (local or global), mode switching, symmetry breaking. Next, based on this understanding, it is desired to modify/extend the current Nonlinear Reduced Order Modeling (NLROM) methodology, basis selection and/or identification methodology, to obtain reliable reduced order models of these structures. Focusing on these goals, the work carried out addressed more specifically the following issues: i) optimization of the basis to capture at best the response in the smallest number of modes, …
- Contributors
- Lin, Jinshan, Mignolet, Marc, Jiang, Hanqing, et al.
- Created Date
- 2020
Cohesive zone model is one of the most widely used model for fracture analysis, but still remains open ended field for research. The earlier works using the cohesive zone model and Extended finite element analysis (XFEM) have been briefly introduced followed by an elaborate elucidation of the same concepts. Cohesive zone model in conjugation with XFEM is used for analysis in static condition in order to check its applicability in failure analysis. A real time setup of pipeline failure due to impingement is analyzed along with a detailed parametric study to understand the influence of the prominent design variable. After …
- Contributors
- Chandrasekhar, Vishal, Liu, Yongming, Oswald, Jay, et al.
- Created Date
- 2016
Improved knowledge connecting the chemistry, structure, and properties of polymers is necessary to develop advanced materials in a materials-by-design approach. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations can provide tremendous insight into how the fine details of chemistry, molecular architecture, and microstructure affect many physical properties; however, they face well-known restrictions in their applicable temporal and spatial scales. These limitations have motivated the development of computationally-efficient, coarse-grained methods to investigate how microstructural details affect thermophysical properties. In this dissertation, I summarize my research work in structure-based coarse-graining methods to establish the link between molecular-scale structure and macroscopic properties of two different polymers. Systematically …
- Contributors
- Agrawal, Vipin, Oswald, Jay, Peralta, Pedro, et al.
- Created Date
- 2016
This investigation develops small-size reduced order models (ROMs) that provide an accurate prediction of the response of only part of a structure, referred to as component-centric ROMs. Four strategies to construct such ROMs are presented, the first two of which are based on the Craig-Bampton Method and start with a set of modes for the component of interest (the β component). The response in the rest of the structure (the α component) induced by these modes is then determined and optimally represented by applying a Proper Orthogonal Decomposition strategy using Singular Value Decomposition. These first two methods are effectively basis …
- Contributors
- Wang, Yuting, Mignolet, Marc P, Jiang, Hanqing, et al.
- Created Date
- 2017
Recently, the use of zinc oxide (ZnO) nanowires as an interphase in composite materials has been demonstrated to increase the interfacial shear strength between carbon fiber and an epoxy matrix. In this research work, the strong adhesion between ZnO and carbon fiber is investigated to elucidate the interactions at the interface that result in high interfacial strength. First, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations are performed to calculate the adhesive energy between bare carbon and ZnO. Since the carbon fiber surface has oxygen functional groups, these were modeled and MD simulations showed the preference of ketones to strongly interact with ZnO, however, …
- Contributors
- Galan Vera, Magdian Ulises, Sodano, Henry A, Jiang, Hanqing, et al.
- Created Date
- 2013
A previously developed small time scale fatigue crack growth model is improved, modified and extended with an emphasis on creating the simplest models that maintain the desired level of accuracy for a variety of materials. The model provides a means of estimating load sequence effects by continuously updating the crack opening stress every cycle, in a simplified manner. One of the significant phenomena of the crack opening stress under negative stress ratio is the residual tensile stress induced by the applied compressive stress. A modified coefficient is introduced to determine the extent to which residual stress impact the crack closure …
- Contributors
- Venkatesan, Karthik Rajan, Liu, Yongming, Oswald, Jay, et al.
- Created Date
- 2016
In this thesis, a FORTRAN code is rewritten in C++ with an object oriented ap- proach. There are several reasons for this purpose. The first reason is to establish the basis of a GPU programming. To write programs that utilize GPU hardware, CUDA or OpenCL is used which only support C and C++. FORTRAN has a feature that lets its programs to call C/C++ functions. FORTRAN sends relevant data to C/C++, which in turn sends that data to OpenCL. Although this approach works, it makes the code messy and bulky and in the end more difficult to deal with. More- …
- Contributors
- Safarkhani, Salar, Herrmann, Mrcus, Oswald, Jay, et al.
- Created Date
- 2015
Recent studies of the occurrence of post-flutter limit cycle oscillations (LCO) of the F-16 have provided good support to the long-standing hypothesis that this phenomenon involves a nonlinear structural damping. A potential mechanism for the appearance of nonlinearity in the damping are the nonlinear geometric effects that arise when the deformations become large enough to exceed the linear regime. In this light, the focus of this investigation is first on extending nonlinear reduced order modeling (ROM) methods to include viscoelasticity which is introduced here through a linear Kelvin-Voigt model in the undeformed configuration. Proceeding with a Galerkin approach, the ROM …
- Contributors
- Song, Pengchao, Mignolet, Marc P, Chattopadhyay, Aditi, et al.
- Created Date
- 2015
Droplet-structure interactions play a pivotal role in many engineering applications as droplet-based solutions are evolving. This work explores the physical understanding of these interactions through systematic research leading to improvements in thermal management via dropwise condensation (DWC), and breathable protective wearables against chemical aerosols for better thermoregulation. In DWC, the heat transfer rate can be further increased by increasing the nucleation and by optimally ‘refreshing’ the surface via droplet shedding. Softening of surfaces favor the former while having an adverse effect on the latter. This optimization problem is addressed by investigating how mechanical properties of a substrate impact relevant droplet-surface …
- Contributors
- Phadnis, Akshay, Rykaczewski, Konrad, Wang, Robert, et al.
- Created Date
- 2019