scholarly journals Effects of temperature and repeat layer spacing on mechanical properties of graphene/polycrystalline copper nanolaminated composites under shear loading

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
pp. 863-877
Author(s):  
Chia-Wei Huang ◽  
Man-Ping Chang ◽  
Te-Hua Fang

In the present study, the characteristics of graphene/polycrystalline copper nanolaminated (GPCuNL) composites under shear loading are investigated by molecular dynamics simulations. The effects of different temperatures, graphene chirality, repeat layer spacing, and grain size on the mechanical properties, such as failure mechanism, dislocation, and shear modulus, are observed. The results indicate that as the temperature increases, the content of Shockley dislocations will increase and the maximum shear stress of the zigzag and armchair directions also decreases. The mechanical strength of the zigzag direction is more dependent on the temperature than that of the armchair direction. Moreover, self-healing occurs in the armchair direction, which causes the shear stress to increase after failure. Furthermore, the maximum shear stress and the shear strength of the composites decrease with an increase of the repeat layer spacing. Also, the shear modulus increases by increasing the grain size of copper.

2013 ◽  
Vol 135 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana C. Vale ◽  
Jennifer Faustino ◽  
Luís Reis ◽  
Ana Lopes ◽  
Bruno Vidal ◽  
...  

As one of the major functions of bone is to provide structural support for the musculoskeletal system, it is important to evaluate its mechanical strength. Bones may be subjected to multiaxial stresses due to bone pathologies, accidental loads which may lead to hip, wrist fracture, or to a prosthetic joint replacement. Twist loading may lead to fractures, especially involving long bones from lower limbs. The aim of this work was to study the effect of the strain rate on the shear properties of trabecular bone samples from women with hip fracture (from 65 to 100 years). Cylindrical samples were core drilled from human femoral heads along the primary trabecular direction. The cylinder's ends were polished and embedded in blocks of polymeric material which fit the grips of the testing device. Deformation rates of 0.005, 0.01, 0.015, and 0.05 s−1 were applied. Twisting tests were conducted with or without an applied axial load of 500 N. From the torque-angular displacement curves, the shear stress–strain curves were obtained. The maximum shear strength and the shear modulus (i.e. the slope of the linear region) were determined. A large scatter of the results of the shear strength and the shear modulus was found, which is probably related to the heterogeneity of nonhealthy human bone samples. There is no significant effect of the strain rate on the maximum shear stress and the shear modulus, either in tests undertaken with or without the application of an axial load. The effect of strain rate on nonhealthy bone trabecular twisting properties did not follow the trend observed on the effect of strain rate in healthy bone, where an increase is detected.


2009 ◽  
Vol 1224 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alan F. Jankowski

AbstractNanocrystalline nanolaminate (ncnl) structures are widely used in the study of physical properties in order to engineer materials for a variety of industrial applications. Often, novel and interesting mechanical behaviours that are found in nanolaminate materials can be linked with two characteristic features of structure. These are the layer pair spacing and the grain size. For the case of nanolaminates synthesized by physical vapor deposition processes, the layer spacing corresponds with the repeating sequence of layer pairs and can be referred to as composition wavelength. The grain size is the average width of the tapered columnar structure along the growth direction. Since the mechanical properties of strength and hardness are known to functionally vary with the separation between dislocations in crystalline materials, both structural features can potentially contribute to the total interfacial area and the characteristic separation of interfaces that mitigate dislocation motion. In this investigation, the individual contribution of layer pair spacing and grain size to the total interfacial structure are each quantified in an assessment of strength and hardness. A model is proposed for the total interfacial area of the material volume under plastic deformation that can quantify the interfacial area contribution from the layer pairs and the grain size. It is anticipated that each structural feature can potentially dominate the plastic deformation of the nanolaminate as dependent upon the specific layer pair spacing, the grain size, and the extent of plastic deformation.


2016 ◽  
Vol 862 ◽  
pp. 298-304
Author(s):  
Eva Labašová ◽  
Rastislav Ďuriš ◽  
Vladimír Labaš

The contribution is focused on estimating the shear modulus of the samples of circular and hollow circular sections by static method. The samples were loaded by simple torsion, individual sections were stressed by shear stress. Theoretical basis are determined by linear elasticity and strength theory and they define the relation between shear modulus, maximum shear stress and relative strains. Relative strains are determined by using measurement apparatus and measurement system Quantum X MX 840.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 1029 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liang Chen ◽  
Peng Wu ◽  
Yanlong Chen ◽  
Wei Zhang

The effect of freeze-thaw on the physical-mechanical properties and fracture behavior of rock under combined compression and shear loading was crucial for revealing the instability mechanism and optimizing the structure design of rock engineering in cold regions. However, there were few reports on the failure behavior of rock treated by freeze-thaw under combined compression and shear loading due to the lack of test equipment. In this work, a novel combined compression and shear test (C-CAST) system was introduced to carry out a series of uniaxial compression tests on saturated yellow sandstone under various inclination angles (θ = 0°, 5°, 10°, and 15°) and the number of freeze-thaw cycles (N = 0, 20, 40, and 60). The test results showed that the P-wave velocity dramatically decreased, while the rock quality and porosity increased gradually as N increased; the peak compression strength and elastic modulus obviously decreased with the increasing θ and N, while the peak shear stress increased gradually with the increasing θ and decreased with the increase of N, indicating that the shear stress component can accelerate the crack propagation and reduce its resistance to deformation. The acoustic emission (AE) results revealed that the change of crack initiation (CI) stress and crack damage (CD) stress with the θ and N had a similar trend as that of the peak compression strength and elastic modulus. Particularly, the CI and CD thresholds at 60 cycles were only 81.31% and 84.47% of that at 0° cycle and indicated a serious freeze-thaw damage phenomenon, which was consistent with the results of scanning electron microscopy (SEM) with the appearance of some large-size damage cracks. The fracture mode of sandstone was dependent on the inclination angle. The failure mode developed from both the tensile mode (0°) and combined tensile-shear mode (5°) to a pure shear failure (10°–15°) with the increasing inclination angle. Meanwhile, the freeze-thaw cycle only had an obvious effect on the failure mode of the specimen at a 5° inclination. Finally, a novel multivariate regression analysis method was used to predict the peak compression strength and elastic modulus based on the initial strength parameters (θ = 0°, N = 0). The study results can provide an important reference for the engineering design of rock subjected to a complex stress environment in cold regions.


1975 ◽  
Vol 19 (03) ◽  
pp. 155-163
Author(s):  
M. A. Shama

A brief note is given on various components of the longitudinal vertical shearing force. The stillwater component is examined with particular emphasis on the effect of local cargo loading and the mechanism of shear load transmission. The main factors affecting the wave-induced and dynamic components are indicated and an approximate method is given for estimating the impulsive dynamic component. A method is then given for calculating the shear stress distribution over a typical section of a bulk carrier. The ship section is idealized by a simplified structural model comprising closed and open cells. The structural model retains all the geometrical properties of the original section. Two numerical examples are considered to examine the effect of ship section parameters on shear stress distribution. It is shown that:(i) High shear stresses may be developed in the side shell plating.(ii) The variation of ship section parameters has a negligible effect on the maximum shear stress and may have a significant local effect.(iii) The shear carrying capacity of a given ship section could be easily estimated. Alternatively, for a given shearing force, a "shear coefficient," representing shear capability, could be estimated.


1980 ◽  
Vol 53 (5) ◽  
pp. 1133-1144 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. S. Porter ◽  
E. A. Meinecke

Abstract Rubber has a stress-strain response to compression-shear loadings that is the same as its stress-strain response to simple shear loadings. However, its load-deflection response to the compression-shear loading is not the same as its simple shear response. In determining the stress-strain relationship of the compression-shear loading from the load-deflection responses, three factors must be considered. First, the compression of the sample gives a lower rubber thickness. After calculating the strain, the lower thickness will give a higher strain than the original thickness at an equal deflection. Second, the compression gives a larger surface area due to bulging of the rubber. The higher area would result in a lower stress than the original area at an equal load. Third, the force that is necessary to compress the rubber block is stored in the rubber. When the rubber is sheared, the shear vector of the compressive force aides in deflecting the rubber. Therefore, the shear force vector would be added to the recorded load to determine the total force needed to shear the rubber. The resulting shear stress would be higher than the shear stress calculated by using the recorded load in calculating the shear stress. With all three factors accounted for, the shear stress-strain of the rubber is the same for the compressed part as it is for the uncompressed part. Therefore, the rubber's shear modulus, the slope of the shear stress-strain curve, has not been affected by the superimposed compression and remains an inherent property of the rubber. When designing a part to be used in a compression-shear application, one can use the shear and compression moduli normally obtained for shear and compression applications. The compression modulus would be used for determining the compressive spring rate and the amount of force used in lowering the shear spring rate. The shear modulus would be used to determine the shear rate by taking into account the geometry changes and the force due to compression.


1967 ◽  
Vol 89 (3) ◽  
pp. 508-510
Author(s):  
T. C. Ku ◽  
S. S. So

Hardness, an experimentally determined quantity, cannot be related conveniently to other mechanical properties of a material. This note is aimed at deriving a better interpretation of the Brinell hardness in terms of some common mechanical properties such as Young’s modulus, Poisson’s ratio, and the yield point in shear. The Brinell hardness test can be idealized to that of a rigid frictionless sphere indenting a semi-infinite solid under a given load. Under the condition of Brinell hardness test, the maximum shear stress at any point in the elastic region along the axis of symmetry can be obtained from Terazawa’s solution. The Brinell hardness can then be interpreted as a measurement of the depth along the axis of symmetry where the maximum shear stress is equal to a given fraction of the yield point in shear, or the maximum shear stress expressed as a fraction of the yield point in shear at a given depth.


2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (8) ◽  
pp. 4741-4748 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yunlong Ma ◽  
Sen Zhang ◽  
Yunfei Xu ◽  
Xiaoyi Liu ◽  
Sheng-Nian Luo

The effects of temperature and grain size on mechanical properties of polycrystalline copper–graphene nanolayered (PCuGNL) composites are investigated by analytical mechanical models and molecular dynamics simulations.


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