shear direction
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Geology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sanna Holm-Alwmark ◽  
Timmons M. Erickson ◽  
Aaron J. Cavosie

Little is known about the microstructural behavior of magnetite during hypervelocity impact events, even though it is a widespread accessory mineral and an important magnetic carrier in terrestrial and extraterrestrial rocks. We report systematic electron backscatter diffraction crystallographic analysis of shock features in magnetite from a transect across the 52-km-diameter ca. 380 Ma Siljan impact structure in Sweden. Magnetite grains in granitoid samples contain brittle fracturing, crystal-plasticity, and lamellar twins. Deformation twins along {111} with shear direction of <112> are consistent with spinel-law twins. Inferred bulk shock pressures for the investigated samples, as constrained by planar deformation features (PDFs) in quartz and shock twins in zircon, range from 0 to 20 GPa; onset of shock-induced twinning in magnetite is observed at >5 GPa. These results highlight the utility of magnetite to record shock deformation in rocks that experience shock pressures >5 GPa, which may be useful in quartz-poor samples. Despite significant hydrothermal alteration and the variable transformation of host magnetite to hematite, shock effects are preserved, which demonstrates that magnetite is a reliable mineral for preserving shock deformation over geologic time.


Author(s):  
Eike Dohmen ◽  
Dmitry Yu Borin

Abstract In this paper the influence of the angle between the applied external magnetic field and the mechanical shear direction on the measured elasticity of a magnetorheological (MR) elastomer is addressed. The whole range of magnetic field angles from 0○ to 90○ is analyzed in steps of 5○. Though this dependence is of highest importance for practical applications this issue is rather neglected in previous studies. The work uses MR elastomer specimens based on a silicone rubber matrix containing iron powder in weight fractions of 82 wt.% and 89 wt.%. It has been shown that the measured modulus of elasticity of such composites decreases as the angle between an external magnetic field and applied shear deformation increases. As the framework for the discussion of the findings a macroscopic explanation associated with the magneto-deformation effect as well as an influence of the demagnetizing factor are considered.


The effect of preliminary deformation on the microstructure and texture of iron-chromium alloy prepared by severe plastic deformation (SPD) has been investigated in grain refinement and inhomogeneity structure. Equal channel angular pressing (ECAP) is a well-known SPD process that uses a die channel with a sharp angle. The texture and misorientation map of ECAP processed material was observed electron backscattered diffraction (EBSD) analysis, providing information on structure evolution. The observation was done in the transverse plane from the middle to the sub-surface. The data logger also records the pressure of the ECAP process. The result showed that the sub-surface has a more deformed structure than the middle due to the die channel's sharp angle and shear direction. The texture exhibited a random orientation after the first pass ECAP process. The stacking fault energy and accumulation dislocation are also associated with this process. Several shear bands can be seen clearly, which is parallel to the shear direction. It concluded that the preliminary deformation by ECAP was effective to promote grain refinement due to their high equivalent strain


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (23) ◽  
pp. 11387
Author(s):  
Jun Zhang ◽  
Mingchang Ji ◽  
Yafei Jia ◽  
Chenxi Miao ◽  
Cheng Wang ◽  
...  

This paper presents an experimental study on the anisotropic shear strength behavior of soil–geogrid interfaces. A new type of interface shear test device was developed, and a series of soil–geogrid interface shear tests were conducted for three different biaxial geogrids and three different triaxial geogrids under the shear directions of 0°, 45° and 90°. Clean fine sand, coarse sand, and gravel were selected as the testing materials to investigate the influence of particle size. The experimental results for the interface shear strength behavior, and the influences of shear direction and particle size are presented and discussed. The results indicate that the interface shear strength under the same normal stress varies with shear direction for all the biaxial and triaxial geogrids investigated, which shows anisotropic shear strength behavior of soil–geogrid interfaces. The soil–biaxial geogrid interfaces show stronger anisotropy than that of the soil–triaxial geogrid interfaces under different shear directions. Particle size has a great influence on the anisotropy shear strength behavior of soil–geogrid interfaces.


Metals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (12) ◽  
pp. 1925
Author(s):  
Young Gun Ko ◽  
Kotiba Hamad

The aim of this paper was to investigate the microstructural development and properties of interstitial free (IF) steel fabricated using the DSR (differential speed rolling) process. Severe plastic deformation of the DSR passes was imposed on the sample for up to four passes, leading to ~1.7 total strain with a speed ratio of 1:4 between the two rolls. Microstructural observation revealed that the equiaxed grain size of ~0.7 µm, including the formation of grain boundaries with a high angle of misorientation, was reached after four operations of DSR, which was attributed to the grain subdivision of severely elongated ferrite grain. Since the deformation mode of the DSR operation was dominated by severe shear deformation, the main shear texture of the bcc components appeared in all DSR operations in which the α-fiber of the {110} slip became a main component in accommodating the severe plastic deformation of the DSR process. The intensity of the shear texture, the {110} and {112} slip, increased by increasing the number of passes. Moreover, the γ-fiber of the <112>-type planes was activated as a result of the alternation of the shear direction during sample rotation. The microhardness and room temperature tensile tests revealed that the strength of the IF steel improved as the amount of strain increased, and this was attributed to the grain refinement and texture characteristics of the samples after the DSR processing.


Mathematics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (23) ◽  
pp. 3008
Author(s):  
Antonio Lamura ◽  
Adriano Tiribocchi

The phase separation of a two-dimensional active binary mixture is studied under the action of an applied shear through numerical simulations. It is highlighted how the strength of the external flow modifies the initial shape of growing domains. The activity is responsible for the formation of isolated droplets which affect both the coarsening dynamics and the morphology of the system. The characteristic dimensions of domains along the flow and the shear direction are modulated in time by oscillations whose amplitudes are reduced when the activity increases. This induces a broadening of the distribution functions of domain lengths with respect to the passive case due to the presence of dispersed droplets of different sizes.


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (22) ◽  
pp. 7631
Author(s):  
Huizhen Zhang ◽  
Changsuo Zhang ◽  
Zejin Yang ◽  
Zhiqiang Li ◽  
Chenlong Wang

Joint roughness determination is a fundamental issue in many areas of rock engineering, because joint roughness has significant influences on mechanical properties and deformation behavior of rock masses. Available models suggested in the literature neglected combined effects of shear direction, scale of rock discontinuities, inclination angle, and amplitude of asperities during the roughness calculations. The main goals of this paper are to establish a comprehensive parameter that considers the characteristics of the size effect, anisotropy, and point spacing effect of the discontinuity roughness, and to investigate the correlation between the proposed comprehensive parameter and joint roughness coefficients. In this work, the Barton ten standard profiles are digitally represented, then the morphological characteristics of the discontinuity profiles are extracted. A comprehensive parameter that considers the characteristics of the size effect, anisotropy, and point spacing effect of the discontinuity roughness is established, and its correlation with joint roughness coefficients (JRC) is investigated. The correlation between the proposed discontinuity roughness parameter and the joint roughness coefficients can predict the JRC value of the natural discontinuities with high accuracy, which provides tools for comprehensively characterizing the roughness characteristics of rock discontinuities. The roughness index Rvh[−30°,0] reflects the gentle slope characteristics of the rock discontinuity profiles in the shear direction, which ignores the segments with steep slopes greater than 30° on the discontinuity profiles. The influence of steep slope segments greater than 30° should be considered for the roughness anisotropy parameter in the future.


Author(s):  
Joshua B. Wadler ◽  
Joseph J. Cione ◽  
Jun A. Zhang ◽  
Evan A. Kalina ◽  
John Kaplan

AbstractThe relationship between deep-layer environmental wind shear direction and tropical cyclone (TC) boundary layer thermodynamic structures is explored in multiple independent databases. Analyses derived from the tropical cyclone buoy database (TCBD) show that when TCs experience northerly-component shear, the 10-m equivalent potential temperature (θe) tends to be more symmetric than when shear has a southerly component. The primary asymmetry in θe in TCs experiencing southerly-component shear is radially outwards from twice the radius of maximum wind speed, with the left-of-shear quadrants having lower θe by 4–6 K than the right-of-shear quadrants. As with the TCBD, an asymmetric (symmetric) distribution of 10-m θe for TCs experiencing southerly-component (northerly-component) shear was found using composite observations from dropsondes. These analyses show that differences in the degree of symmetry near the sea surface extend through the depth of the boundary layer. Additionally, mean dropsonde profiles illustrate that TCs experiencing northerly-component shear are more potentially unstable between 500 m and 1000 m altitude, signaling a more favorable environment for the development of surface-based convection in rainband regions.Analyses from the Statistical Hurricane Intensity Prediction Scheme (SHIPS) Database show that subsequent strengthening (weakening) for TCs in the Atlantic Basin preferentially occurs in northerly-component (southerly-component) deep-layer environmental wind shear environments which further illustrates that the asymmetric distribution of boundary layer thermodynamics is unfavorable for TC intensification. These differences emphasize the impact of deep-layer wind shear direction on TC intensity changes which likely result from the superposition of large-scale advection with the shear-relative asymmetries in TC structure.


Author(s):  
Chia Min Lin ◽  
Kaleb C Burrage ◽  
Chris Perreault ◽  
Wei-Chih Chen ◽  
Cheng-Chien Chen ◽  
...  

Abstract The compression behavior of osmium metal was investigated up to 280 GPa (volume compression V/Vo =0.725) under nonhydrostatic conditions at ambient temperature using angle dispersive axial x-ray diffraction (A-XRD) with a diamond anvil cell (DAC). In addition, shear strength of osmium was measured to 170 GPa using radial x-ray diffraction (R-XRD) technique in DAC. Both diffraction techniques in DAC employed platinum as an internal pressure standard. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations were also performed, and the computed lattice parameters and volumes under compression are in good agreement with the experiments. DFT predicts a monotonous increase in axial ratio (c/a) with pressure and the structural anomalies of less than 1 % in (c/a) ratio below 150 GPa were not reproduced in theoretical calculations and hydrostatic measurements. The measured value of shear strength of osmium (τ) approaches a limiting value of 6 GPa above a pressure of 50 GPa in contrast to theoretical predictions of 24 GPa and is likely due to imperfections in polycrystalline samples. DFT calculations also enable the studies of shear and tensile deformations. The theoretical ideal shear stress is found along the (001)[1-10] shear direction with the maximal shear stress ~24 GPa at critical strain ~0.13.


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