Need the Uniform Stress Field Inside Multiple Interacting Inclusions Be Hydrostatic?

Author(s):  
Ming Dai ◽  
Peter Schiavone
1982 ◽  
Vol 49 (2) ◽  
pp. 353-360 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. C. Yang ◽  
Y. T. Chou

This paper deals with a generalized plane problem in which a uniform stress-free strain transformation takes place in the region of an elliptic cyclinder (the inclusion) oriented in the 〈111〉 direction in an anisotropic solid of cubic symmetry. Closed-form solutions for the elastic fields and the strain energies are presented. The perturbation of an otherwise uniform stress field due to a 〈111〉 elliptic inhomogeneity is also treated including two extreme cases, elliptic cavities and rigid inhomogeneities.


Volume 1 ◽  
2004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hongzhao Liu ◽  
Ziying Wu ◽  
Lilan Liu ◽  
Daning Yuan ◽  
Zhongming Zhang

For the high damping metal material like damping alloy, the damping capacity usually changes with the strain amplitude and frequency nonlinearly. First, to extract the pattern of the internal damping versus strain, two time-domain calculation methods are presented in this paper. One is the moving exponent method (MEM for short) based on FFT (MEM+FFT) and the other is the moving autoregressive model method (MARM). The computing accuracy of the two methods has been compared through numerical simulations. The nonlinear relation curve of loss factor versus strain is achieved by the impulse excitation experiment employing uniform stress field. Then, to extract the pattern of the internal damping versus vibrating frequency, the sine sweep-frequency excitation experiment based on the half-power bandwidth method is carried out. The resulting curve indicates that the internal damping is also a nonlinear function of frequency.


The kinetic theory of isothermal atomic transport via point defects that was presented in two previous papers (Franklin, A. D. & Lidiard, A. B. Proc. R. Soc. Lond . A 389, 405–431 (1983) and Franklin, A. D. & Lidiard, A. B. Proc. R. Soc. Lond . A 392, 457–473 (1984)) has been expanded into a three-dimensional formulation to analyse transport in an applied non-uniform stress field. The fluxes of the various defect species take the general form familiar from non-equilibrium thermodynamics, while the contribution to the force on defect species Y arising from the stress σ αβ is confirmed to be v ∇(λ (Y) αβ σ αβ ), where v is the molecular volume of the solid and λ (Y) αβ is the elastic-dipole strain tensor of the defect species Y (summation over repeated Cartesian indices α, β is here assumed). Full details of these calculations are presented in Lidiard, A. B. A. E. R. E. Rep . no R. 11367 (1984).


2011 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. 1691-1696 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Camas ◽  
Irene Hiraldo ◽  
Pablo Lopez-Crespo ◽  
Antonio Gonzalez-Herrera

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