Modeling Nonlinear and Time-Dependent Behaviors of Polymeric Sandwich Composites at Various Environmental Conditions

Author(s):  
Bentolhoda Davoodi ◽  
Antonio Gomez ◽  
Brian Pinto ◽  
Anastasia Muliana ◽  
Valeria La Saponara
Author(s):  
BENTOLHODA DAVOODI ◽  
ANTONIO GOMEZ ◽  
BRIAN PINTO ◽  
ANASTASIA MULIANA ◽  
VALERIA LA SAPONARA

2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 131-138
Author(s):  
R. NAVEEN

Industries like aerospace, civil construction and automation uses the sandwich composites widely due to their high strength at low weight. The face sheets and core of the composites play a vital role in the properties of composites. The mechanical properties of these types of structures depend on the application and under various environmental conditions. Most of the sandwich composites will fail due to debonding and core crushing. In this research, three types of sandwich structures like bamboo, V-Board and metal type are tested and characterized for mechanical properties. The sandwich composites are tested by 3-point bending and UTM test to identify several mechanical properties like tensile strength, Young’s modulus, fracture, etc. The results show that the bamboo type sandwich composites have high strength and low weight as compared to other composites.


Climate ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 17 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dan Li ◽  
Sakdirat Kaewunruen

Railway networks are exposed to various environmental conditions. It is thus critical that infrastructure components can tolerate such effects by design. Railway sleepers are a critical safety component in ballasted track systems. Prestressed concrete is currently the most common material for railway sleepers due to its superior advantages in structural performance, low maintenance, sustainability, and construction. In practice, many prestressed concrete sleepers are installed in harsh environments that are subject to various changes in climate. Environmental conditions are, therefore, one of the most critical phenomena affecting the time-dependent behaviour of prestressed concrete sleepers. Hence, the impact of climate changes on the serviceability of railway infrastructure needs to be thoroughly investigated. Temperature and relative humidity are crucial aspects that have not been sufficiently studied so far with reference to prestressed concrete sleepers embedded in track systems. This study aims to investigate the effects of extreme climatic conditions on the performance and time-dependent behaviour of prestressed concrete sleepers using contemporary design approaches. The issue concerning the effects of climate uncertainties on creep and shrinkage is rigorously investigated on the basis of both environmental temperature and relative humidity. The outcome indicates that environmental conditions play a vital role in the time-dependent behaviour of prestressed concrete sleepers. The insights will be essential for assessing the long-term serviceability of prestressed concrete sleepers that have been installed in railway lines and are subjected to extreme environmental conditions.


2017 ◽  
Vol 53 (3) ◽  
pp. 224-240 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthias J Müller ◽  
Anja Haag

Chronobiology and chronobiological research deal with time-dependent physiological processes and behavioral correlates as well as their adaptation to environmental conditions. Chronobiological research is presently focused on the impact of circadian rhythms on human behavior. In the last three decades, chronobiology has established itself as an independent area of research evolving to an important field of clinical psychology and psychiatry. In this overview, the results of studies on the clinical importance of chronotypes are summarized. The main focus is on the role of chronotype in depressive disorders.


2015 ◽  
Vol 48 (6) ◽  
pp. 1870-1882 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tina Weigel ◽  
Tilmann Leisegang ◽  
Matthias Zschornak ◽  
Marco Herrmann ◽  
Manuel Rothenberger ◽  
...  

Essential to the quality of X-ray analysis in crystallography, such as diffractometry and spectrometry, is a stable and reproducible X-ray source. Commonly, different optical elements are utilized to provide a dedicated X-ray beam. The stable alignment of all these components is a prerequisite in order to reduce aberrations and to achieve high signal-to-noise ratios. Besides such aberrations and electronically induced variations of the X-ray primary beam intensity, the environmental conditions are of particular importance, most prominently the barometric pressure, humidity and temperature. In a qualitative as well as quantitative study, the influence of the environmental conditions on the primary beam intensity of a sealed tube with a Cu anode and their correlations are determined. For a common setup, utilizing a scintillation counter, laboratory as well as external conditions are monitored simultaneously for 28 d. Their individual influence on the X-ray intensity and their correlations are evaluated by statistical analysis including time lag. By this comprehensive study, experimental intensity variations of up to ΔI/I= 1.153 ± 0.001% are determined during density of air changes of Δρ/ρ = 3.7 ± 0.6%. This is interpreted in terms of air transmission variations of up toTX-ray= 1.137 ± 0.001% for a typical X-ray analysis setup due to ambient barometric pressure, temperature and humidity changes for natural mid- and long-term variations. Significant correlations with respect to daily and weekly cycles and in particular with ambient conditions are determined. These results are used for a time-dependent absorption correction of the measured intensity, which reduces the standard error by about 25%.


2014 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 691-728
Author(s):  
A. Y. Bossa ◽  
B. Diekkrüger

Abstract. CO2 production and transport from forest floors is an important component of the carbon cycle and is closely related to the global atmosphere CO2 concentration. If we are to understand the feedback between soil processes and atmospheric CO2, we need to know more about the spatio-temporal variability of this soil respiration under different environmental conditions. In this study, long-term measurements were conducted in a spruce-dominated forest ecosystem in western Germany. Multivariate analysis-based similarities between different measurements sites led to the detection of site clusters along two CO2 emission axes: (1) mainly controlled by soil temperature and moisture condition, and (2) mainly controlled by root biomass and the forest floor litter. The combined effects of soil temperature and soil moisture were used as a time-dependent rating factor affecting the optimal CO2 production and transport at cluster level. High/moderate/weak time-dependent rating factors were associated with the different clusters. The process-based most distant clusters were identified using specified pattern characteristics: the reaction rates in the soil layers, the activation energy for bio-chemical reactions, the water sorption and desorption constant, the root biomass factor, the litter layer factor and the organic matter factor. A HYDRUS-1D model system was inversely used to compute soil hydraulic parameters from soil moisture measurements. Heat transport parameters were adjusted based on observed soil temperatures. The results were used to adjust CO2 production and transport characteristics such as the molecular diffusion coefficient of carbon dioxide in air and water and the CO2 production by soil microorganisms and plant roots under optimal conditions for each cluster. Although the uncertainty associated with the HYDRUS-1-D simulations is higher, the results were consistent with both the multivariate clustering and the time-dependent rating of site production/transport. Finally, four clusters with significantly different environmental conditions (i.e., permanent high soil moisture condition, accumulated litter amount, high variability in soil moisture content, dominant temperature-dependence) were found relevant in explaining the spatio-temporal variability of CO2 efflux and providing reference specific characteristic values for the investigated area.


Materials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 885
Author(s):  
Amit Jain ◽  
Bora Gencturk

Chloride ions (Cl−)-induced corrosion is one of the main degradation mechanisms in reinforced concrete (RC) structures. In most situations, the degradation initiates with the transport of Cl− from the surface of the concrete towards the reinforcing steel. The accumulation of Cl− at the steel-concrete interface could initiate reinforcement corrosion once a threshold Cl− concentration is achieved. An accurate numerical model of the Cl− transport in concrete is required to predict the corrosion initiation in RC structures. However, existing numerical models lack a representation of the heterogenous concrete microstructure resulting from the varying environmental conditions and the indirect effect of time dependent temperature and relative humidity (RH) on the water adsorption and Cl− binding isotherms. In this study, a numerical model is developed to study the coupled transport of Cl− with heat, RH and oxygen (O2) into the concrete. The modeling of the concrete microstructure is performed using the Virtual Cement and Concrete Testing Laboratory (VCCTL) code developed by the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). The concept of equivalent maturation time is utilized to eliminate the limitation of simulating concrete microstructure using VCCTL in specific environmental conditions such as adiabatic. Thus, a time-dependent concrete microstructure, which depends on the hydration reactions coupled with the temperature and RH of the environment, is achieved to study the Cl− transport. Additionally, Cl− binding isotherms, which are a function of the pH of the concrete pore solution, Cl− concentration, and weight fraction of mono-sulfate aluminate (AFm) and calcium-silicate-hydrate (C-S-H), obtained from an experimental study by the same authors are utilized to account for the Cl− binding of cement hydration products. The temperature dependent RH diffusion was considered to account for the transport of Cl− with moisture transport. The temperature and RH diffusion in the concrete domain, composite theory, and Cl− binding and water adsorption isotherms are used in combination, to estimate the ensuing Cl− diffusion field within the concrete. The coupled transport process of heat, RH, Cl−, and O2 is implemented in the Multiphysics Object-Oriented Simulation Environment (MOOSE) developed by the U.S. Idaho National Laboratory (INL). The model was verified and validated using data from multiple experimental studies with different concrete mixture proportions, curing durations, and environmental conditions. Additionally, a sensitivity analysis was performed to identify that the water-to-cement (w/c) ratio, the exposure duration, the boundary conditions: temperature, RH, surface Cl− concentration, Cl− diffusion coefficient in the capillary water, and the critical RH are the important parameters that govern the Cl− transport in RC structures. In a case study, the capabilities of the developed numerical model are demonstrated by studying the complex 2D diffusion of Cl− in a RC beam located in two different climatic regions: warm and humid weather in Galveston, Texas, and cold and dry weather in North Minnesota, Minnesota, subjected to time varying temperature, RH, and surface Cl− concentrations.


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