scholarly journals Uniaxial deformation of open-cell aluminum foam: the role of internal damage

2004 ◽  
Vol 52 (10) ◽  
pp. 2895-2902 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. San Marchi ◽  
J.-F. Despois ◽  
A. Mortensen
Author(s):  
H. Qiao ◽  
T. G. Murthy ◽  
C. Saldana

Abstract The effects of surface structure on mechanical performance for open-cell aluminum foam specimens was investigated in the present study. A surface gradient for pore structure and diameter was introduced into open cell aluminum foams by machining-based processing. The structure changes in the strut and pore network were evaluated by computed tomography characterization. The role of structure gradients in affecting mechanical performance was determined using digital volume correlation and in situ compression within the computed tomographic scanner. These preliminary results show that the strength of these materials may be enhanced through surface structural gradients.


Author(s):  
Haipeng Qiao ◽  
Tejas G. Murthy ◽  
Christopher Saldana

The effects of surface structure on mechanical performance for open-cell aluminum foam specimens were investigated in the present study. A surface gradient for pore structure and diameter was introduced into open-cell aluminum foams by machining-based processing. The structure changes in the strut and pore network were evaluated by computed tomography characterization. The role of structure gradients in affecting mechanical performance was determined using digital volume correlation and in situ compression within the computed tomographic scanner. These preliminary results show that the strength of these materials may be enhanced through surface structural gradients.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Fausta Loffredo ◽  
Loredana Tammaro ◽  
Tiziana Di Luccio ◽  
Carmela Borriello ◽  
Fulvia Villani ◽  
...  

AbstractTungsten disulfide (WS2) nanotubes (NTs) are examined here as a filler for polylactide (PLA) for their ability to accelerate PLA crystallization and for their promising biocompatibility in relevant to biomedical applications of PLA-WS2 nanocomposites. In this work, we have studied the structural and thermal properties of PLA-WS2 nanocomposite films varying the concentration of WS2 NTs from 0 (neat PLA) to 0.6 wt%. The films were uniaxially drawn at 90 °C and annealed at the same temperature for 3 and 10 min. Using wide angle x-ray scattering, Raman spectroscopy and differential scanning calorimetry, we probed the effects of WS2 NT addition on the structure of the PLA films at various stages of processing (unstretched, stretching, annealing). We found that 0.6 wt% of WS2 induces the same level of crystallinity in as stretched PLA-WS2 as annealing in neat PLA for 10 min. These data provide useful insights into the role of WS2 NTs on the structural evolution of PLA-WS2 composites under uniaxial deformation, and extend their applicability to situations where fine tuning of PLA crystallinity is desirable.


Author(s):  
Nihad Dukhan ◽  
Angel Alvarez

Wind-tunnel pressure drop measurements for airflow through two samples of forty-pore-per-inch commercially available open-cell aluminum foam were undertaken. Each sample’s cross-sectional area perpendicular to the flow direction measured 10.16 cm by 24.13 cm. The thickness in the flow direction was 10.16 cm for one sample and 5.08 cm for the other. The flow rate ranged from 0.016 to 0.101 m3/s for the thick sample and from 0.025 to 0.134 m3/s for the other. The data were all in the fully turbulent regime. The pressure drop for both samples increased with increasing flow rate and followed a quadratic behavior. The permeability and the inertia coefficient showed some scatter with average values of 4.6 × 10−8 m2 and 2.9 × 10−8 m2, and 0.086 and 0.066 for the thick and the thin samples, respectively. The friction factor decayed with the Reynolds number and was weakly dependent on the Reynolds number for Reynolds number greater than 35.


2014 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
pp. 359-364 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sven De Schampheleire ◽  
Peter De Jaeger ◽  
Kathleen De Kerpel ◽  
Bernd Ameel ◽  
Henk Huisseune ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Paiboon Wattanapornphan ◽  
Chakkrist Phongphisutthinan ◽  
Tetsuo Suga ◽  
Masami Mizutani ◽  
Seiji Katayama

2005 ◽  
Vol 36 (3) ◽  
pp. 645-650 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fusheng Han ◽  
Hefa Cheng ◽  
Qiang Wang ◽  
Zhibin Li

2015 ◽  
Vol 82 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Yu ◽  
B. Han ◽  
C. Y. Ni ◽  
Q. C. Zhang ◽  
C. Q. Chen ◽  
...  

Under quasi-static uniaxial compression, inserting aluminum foams into the interstices of a metallic sandwich panel with corrugated core increased significantly both its peak crushing strength and energy absorption per unit mass. This beneficial effect diminished however if the foam relative density was relatively low or the compression velocity became sufficiently high. To provide insight into the varying role of aluminum foam filler with increasing compression velocity, the crushing response and collapse modes of all metallic corrugate-cored sandwich panels filled with close-celled aluminum foams were studied using the method of finite elements (FEs). The constraint that sandwich panels with and without foam filling had the same total weight was enforced. The effects of plastic hardening and strain rate sensitivity of the strut material as well as foam/strut interfacial debonding were quantified. Three collapse modes (quasi-static, transition, and shock modes) were identified, corresponding to different ranges of compression velocity. Strengthening due to foam insertion and inertial stabilization both acted to provide support for the struts against buckling. At relatively low compression velocities, the struts were mainly strengthened by the surrounding foam; at high compression velocities, inertia stabilization played a more dominant role than foam filling.


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