stiff material
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Author(s):  
Roman Arhat ◽  
Serhiy Shlyk ◽  
Viktor Shchetynin ◽  
D. Moloshtan ◽  
Volodymyr Drahobetskyi ◽  
...  

An impact-resistant layered element consisting of two outer layers from highly rigid material and an inner layer from viscoelastic material has been developed. The item reduces the barring effect on the protected object. The design peculiarity is that the outer part has a bend with a deflection arrow within 10… 15 thicknesses, and has a connection of the outer layers from high-stiff material on opposite edges with staples from plastic material, which during plastic deformation flows into the edge holes coaxially in the outer layers, on the inner side of the impact-resistant element is attached a shock-absorbing layer from elastic foamed polymeric material, the back surface of which corresponds to the surface of the protected object. For the parts manufacture it has been developed bending sheet parts method in which the bending the part shelves with a bending element with their subsequent straightening. The aim is to increase the process productivity and the geometric dimensions’ accuracy of the part. Modeling the process of parts spontaneous forming "Impact-resistant element upper sheet" on the reverse and direct schemes is performed by the finite element method in the AnSYS / AutoDYN system. The study purpose is to develop technology and modeling the process of the impact-resistant element sheet parts deformation.


2021 ◽  
pp. 32-37

In a four stroke combustion engine, there are three piston rings, namely two compression piston rings and one lubrication control piston ring. The piston compression ring serves to maintain the combustion pressure, while the piston ring lubrication regulator functions to lubricate the combustion chamber during the energy change process so that the piston will run back and forth in the combustion chamber smoothly. Damage that occurs to the piston ring can be in the form of a broken piston ring, or a scratched or worn piston ring. These things can reduce the quality of the energy transfer process. The piston ring is broken because the ring is too brittle. Vibration that occurs in the piston when combustion occurs at full load increases the possibility of a fracture process in the piston ring. The brittleness of the piston ring is strongly influenced by the material used. To overcome this, a hard but not stiff material is needed. Keywords: Hardness, mileage, Vicker test


Author(s):  
Steffen Brinckmann ◽  
Ruth Schwaiger

Abstract The Oliver–Pharr method is maybe the most established method to determine a material’s Young’s modulus and hardness. However, this method has a number of requirements that render it more challenging for hard and stiff materials. Contact area and frame stiffness have to be calibrated for every tip, and the surface contact has to be accurately identified. The frame stiffness calibration is particularly prone to inaccuracies since it is easily affected, e.g., by sample mounting. In this study, we introduce a method to identify Young’s modulus and hardness from nanoindentation without separate area function and frame stiffness calibrations and without surface contact identification. To this end, we employ automatic image recognition to determine the contact area that might be less than a square micrometer. We introduce the method and compare the results to those of the Oliver–Pharr method. Our approach will be demonstrated and evaluated for nanoindentation of Si, a hard and stiff material, which is challenging for the proposed method. Graphic Abstract


Micromachines ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 619 ◽  
Author(s):  
Allison Stiller ◽  
Joshua Usoro ◽  
Jennifer Lawson ◽  
Betsiti Araya ◽  
María González-González ◽  
...  

While intracortical microelectrode arrays (MEAs) may be useful in a variety of basic and clinical scenarios, their implementation is hindered by a variety of factors, many of which are related to the stiff material composition of the device. MEAs are often fabricated from high modulus materials such as silicon, leaving devices vulnerable to brittle fracture and thus complicating device fabrication and handling. For this reason, polymer-based devices are being heavily investigated; however, their implementation is often difficult due to mechanical instability that requires insertion aids during implantation. In this study, we design and fabricate intracortical MEAs from a shape memory polymer (SMP) substrate that remains stiff at room temperature but softens to 20 MPa after implantation, therefore allowing the device to be implanted without aids. We demonstrate chronic recordings and electrochemical measurements for 16 weeks in rat cortex and show that the devices are robust to physical deformation, therefore making them advantageous for surgical implementation.


2020 ◽  
Vol 87 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
R. M. McMeeking ◽  
M. Ciavarella ◽  
G. Cricrì ◽  
K.-S. Kim

Abstract How friction affects adhesion is addressed. The problem is considered in the context of a very stiff sphere adhering to a compliant, isotropic, linear elastic substrate and experiencing adhesion and frictional slip relative to each other. The adhesion is considered to be driven by very large attractive tractions between the sphere and the substrate that can act only at very small distances between them. As a consequence, the adhesion behavior can be represented by the Johnson–Kendall–Roberts model, and this is assumed to prevail also when frictional slip is occurring. Frictional slip is considered to be resisted by a uniform, constant shear traction at the slipping interface, a model that is considered to be valid for small asperities and for compliant elastomers in contact with stiff material. A simple model for the interaction of friction and adhesion is utilized, in which some of the work done against frictional resistance is assumed to be stored reversibly. This behavior is considered to arise from surface microstructures associated with frictional slip such as interface dislocations, where these microstructures store some elastic strain energy in a reversible manner. When it is assumed that a fixed fraction of the work done against friction is stored reversibly, we obtain good agreement with data.


Author(s):  
Pradeep Lall ◽  
Kalyan Dornala ◽  
Jeff Suhling ◽  
John Deep ◽  
Ryan Lowe

Abstract Electronics components operating under extreme thermo-mechanical stresses are often protected with underfills and potting encapsulation to isolate the severe stresses. By encapsulating the entire PCB, the resin provides complete insulation for the unit thereby combining good electrical properties with excellent mechanical protection. In military and defense applications these components are often subjected to mechanical shock loads of 50,000g and are expected to perform with reliability. Due to the bulk of material surrounding the PCB, potting and encapsulation resins are commonly two-part systems which when mixed together form a solid, fully-cured material, with no by-products. The cured potting materials are prone to interfacial delamination under dynamic shock loading which in turn potentially cause failures in the package interconnects. The study of interfacial fracture resistance in PCB/epoxy potting systems under dynamic shock loading is important in mitigating the risk of system failure in mission critical applications. In this paper, three types of epoxy potting compounds were used as an encapsulation on PCB samples. The potting compounds were selected based on their ultimate elongation under quasi-static loading. Potting compound, A is a stiffer material with 5% of ultimate elongation before failure. Potting compound, B is a moderately stiff material with 12% ultimate elongation. Finally, potting compound C is a softer material with 90% ultimate elongation before failure. The fracture properties and interfacial crack delamination of the PCB/epoxy interface were determined using three-point bend loading with a pre-crack at the interface. The fatigue crack growth of the interfacial delamination was characterized for the three epoxy systems. A prediction of number of cycles to failure and the performance of different epoxy system resistance under cyclic bending loading was assessed.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jip Zonderland ◽  
Ivan Lorenzo Moldero ◽  
Carlos Mota ◽  
Lorenzo Moroni

AbstractThe actin cytoskeleton plays a key role in differentiation of human mesenchymal stromal cells (hMSCs), but its regulation in 3D tissue engineered scaffolds remains poorly studied. hMSCs cultured on 3D electrospun scaffolds made of a stiff material do not form actin stress fibers, contrary to hMSCs on 2D films of the same material. On 3D electrospun- and 3D additive manufactured scaffolds, hMSCs also displayed fewer focal adhesions, lower lamin A and C expression and less YAP1 nuclear localization. Together, this shows that dimensionality prevents the build-up of cellular tension, even on stiff materials. Knock down of either lamin A and C or zyxin resulted in fewer stress fibers in the cell center. Zyxin knock down reduced lamin A and C expression, but not vice versa, showing that this signal chain starts from the outside of the cell. Our study demonstrates that dimensionality changes the actin cytoskeleton through lamin A and C and zyxin, an important insight for future scaffold design, as the actin network, focal adhesions and nuclear stiffness are all critical for hMSC differentiation.


2018 ◽  
Vol 29 (7) ◽  
pp. 1360-1378 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryan T Watkins ◽  
John A Shaw

Our recent buckling experiments on superelastic shape memory alloy columns (initially straight rods and tubes) discovered that during axial shortening, certain specimens bent (buckled) at a critical compressive load and then, surprisingly, straightened (unbuckled) at a larger compressive load. This “buckling–unbuckling” phenomenon, defined here as the deviation from and then return to a straight configuration during monotonic loading, is not only an intriguing phenomenon (contrary to the post-buckling behavior of conventional materials) but also presents the possibility for novel applications. This work aims to provide a clearer understanding of when and why unbuckling occurs, presenting the experimental observations of this phenomenon and the stability analysis of a modified Shanley column model that captures the unbuckling behavior. Unbuckling behavior is shown to be a consequence of a secondary branch that deviates from the principal path at a low-load level (critical buckling load), but reattaches to the principal path at a higher load level (unbuckling load). The analysis shows that unbuckling behavior can only occur for certain combinations of column geometries and nonlinear (stiff–soft–stiff) material laws, that is, relatively stout columns with the right sequence of softening/stiffening to create the necessary restorative bending moment to reset the column to a straight configuration. The feasible space is defined by closed-form bounds on geometric and material parameters, along with a sensitivity analysis of these parameters on the amplitude of unbuckling.


2016 ◽  
Vol 83 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shabnam Raayai-Ardakani ◽  
Jose Luis Yagüe ◽  
Karen K. Gleason ◽  
Mary C. Boyce

The properties and behavior of a surface as well as its interaction with surrounding media depend on the inherent material constituency and the surface topography. Structured surface topography can be achieved via surface wrinkling. Through the buckling of a thin film of stiff material bonded to a substrate of a softer material, wrinkled patterns can be created by inducing compressive stress states in the thin film. Using this same principle, we show the ability to create wrinkled topologies consisting of a highly structured gradient in amplitude and wavelength, and one which can be actively tuned. The mechanics of graded wrinkling are revealed through analytical modeling and finite element analysis, and further demonstrated with experiments.


Open Biology ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 6 (9) ◽  
pp. 160136 ◽  
Author(s):  
Björn Goldenbogen ◽  
Wolfgang Giese ◽  
Marie Hemmen ◽  
Jannis Uhlendorf ◽  
Andreas Herrmann ◽  
...  

The cell wall defines cell shape and maintains integrity of fungi and plants. When exposed to mating pheromone, Saccharomyces cerevisiae grows a mating projection and alters in morphology from spherical to shmoo form. Although structural and compositional alterations of the cell wall accompany shape transitions, their impact on cell wall elasticity is unknown. In a combined theoretical and experimental approach using finite-element modelling and atomic force microscopy (AFM), we investigated the influence of spatially and temporally varying material properties on mating morphogenesis. Time-resolved elasticity maps of shmooing yeast acquired with AFM in vivo revealed distinct patterns, with soft material at the emerging mating projection and stiff material at the tip. The observed cell wall softening in the protrusion region is necessary for the formation of the characteristic shmoo shape, and results in wider and longer mating projections. The approach is generally applicable to tip-growing fungi and plants cells.


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