Yield Behaviour of Two-Way Reinforced Concrete Flyash Brick Slab

Author(s):  
Sushree Sangeeta Panda ◽  
Bhagabat Jena
1985 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 20-23
Author(s):  
Vu Van The

By being statically loaded plastic plates can support loads exceeding the bending collapse pressure, the behaviour of perfectly rigid plastic plates beyond the yield load depends on changes in geometry to the plastic flow. Therefore in post yield behaviour the deflection can not be considered small in comparison with the plate thickness. In this paper we employ the equations of plates at moderately large deflections and the approximate live behaviour of plates introduced in/2,3/ by dividing plates into a number of rigid regions which have been separated by line hinges situated at locations where their discontinue ties in w,i occur, an estimative method of the toad - deflection relationship of arbitrarily shaped plates having arbitrarily boundary conditions is developed. This method is directly extended to anisotropic and reinforced concrete plates.


Author(s):  
G.A. Botton ◽  
C.J. Humphreys

Transition metal aluminides are of great potential interest for high temperature structural applications. Although these materials exhibit good mechanical properties at high temperature, their use in industrial applications is often limited by their intrinsic room temperature brittleness. Whilst this particular yield behaviour is directly related to the defect structure, the properties of the defects (in particular the mobility of dislocations and the slip system on which these dislocations move) are ultimately determined by the electronic structure and bonding in these materials. The lack of ductility has been attributed, at least in part, to the mixed bonding character (metallic and covalent) as inferred from ab-initio calculations. In this work, we analyse energy loss spectra and discuss the features of the near edge structure in terms of the relevant electronic states in order to compare the predictions on bonding directly with spectroscopic experiments. In this process, we compare spectra of late transition metal (TM) to early TM aluminides (FeAl and TiAl) to assess whether differences in bonding can also be detected. This information is then discussed in terms of bonding changes at grain boundaries in NiAl.


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