• Title/Summary/Keyword: Ductile material

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Temperature-Dependent Thermal and Chemical Stabilities as well as Mechanical Properties of Electrodeposited Nanocrystalline Ni

  • Zheng, Liangfu;Peng, Xiao
    • Metals and materials international
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    • v.24 no.6
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    • pp.1293-1302
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    • 2018
  • Nanocrystalline (NC) Ni electrodeposits (EDs) with a mean grain size of $34{\pm}12nm$ has been investigated, from room temperature to $800^{\circ}C$ under a purge gas of argon, by both non-isothermal and isothermal differential scanning calorimetry measurements, in combination with characterization of temperature-dependent microstructural evolution. A significant exothermic peak resulting from superimposition of recrystallization and surface oxidation occurs between 340 and $745^{\circ}C$ at a heating rate of $10^{\circ}C/min$ for the NC Ni EDs. The temperatures for recrystallization and oxidation increase with increasing the heating rate. In addition, recrystallization leads to a profound brittle-ductile transition of the Ni EDs in a narrow range around the peak temperature for the recrystallization.

A Study of Minimum Reinforcement Ratio of Singly Reinforced Beamy (단철근 보의 최소철근비에 대한 고찰)

  • Choi, Seung-Won
    • Journal of the Korea Academia-Industrial cooperation Society
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    • v.22 no.4
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    • pp.396-402
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    • 2021
  • A cross section in RC flexural members must be designed to satisfy flexural strength and ductility requirements simultaneously. In design provisions, ductile behavior is ensured by a sufficient reinforcement ratio or depth of the neutral axis. If the reinforcement ratio is less than the balanced reinforcement ratio, ductile behavior is secured, and this value is theoretically the maximum reinforcement ratio. But for a cross section with less steel, brittle failure can occur regardless of ductile behavior because of unqualifying a cracking moment. Recently, designs with a minimum steel ratio have been increasing along with the use of high-strength material, so in design provisions, a minimum amount of reinforcement is suggested. In the KCI(2012) standard, a minimum amount of reinforcement was suggested in terms of strength of steel and concrete. But in the revised KCI(2017) standard, a minimum amount of reinforcement was suggested by a relationship between the design flexural strength and cracking moment indirectly. This code can reflect the effect of cover thickness, but a material model must be defined. Therefore, the minimum amount of reinforcement in KCI(2012) and KCI(2017) was examined, and a rational review method was studied by parametric analysis.

Characterization of Ductile Metal-FRP Laminated Composites for Strengthening of Structures: Part-II Tensile Behavior (사회기반설물의 내진 보강을 위한 연성재-FRP적층복합체의 역학적 거동 특성 분석: Part-II휨 거동)

  • Park, Cheol-Woo
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Safety
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    • v.27 no.1
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    • pp.55-62
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    • 2012
  • Steel plate or FRP materials have been typically used for the seismic retrofit of civil infrastructures. In order to overcome the limitation of each retrofitting material, a composite material, which takes advantages from both metal and fiber polymer materials, has been developed. In the study herein, the composite retrofitting material consists of metal part(steel or aluminum) and FRP sheet part(glass or carbon fiber). The metal part can enhance the ductility and the FRP part the ultimate strength. As a preliminary study to investigate the fundamental mechanical characteristics of the metal-FRP laminated composite material this study performed the flexural fracture test with various experimental variables including the number, the angle and the combination of FRP laminates. From the aluminum-FRP composite tests no great increase in flexural strength and flexural toughness were observed. However, flexural toughness of steel-FRP laminate composite was increased so that its behavior can be considered in the retrofit design. In addition, the angle and the kind of fibers should be carefully considered in conjunction with the expected loading conditions.

Effect of Quenching Medium on the Mechanical Properties of ADI Treated GCD 50 (GCD 50의 ADI처리시 기계적 성질에 미치는 퀜칭 매질의 영향)

  • Kim, H.G.;Oh, I.S.;Kim, H.J.;Shin, K.G.
    • Journal of the Korean Society for Heat Treatment
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    • v.21 no.3
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    • pp.137-143
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    • 2008
  • Effect of quenching medium on the mechanical properties of ductil iron GCD 50 has been investigated using ADI treated specimens. The specimens have been austenitized at $900^{\circ}C$ for 2 hours, followed by controlled cooling to $800^{\circ}C$ under the cooling rate of $0.05^{\circ}C/sec$, then austempered at $380^{\circ}C$, $330^{\circ}C$, $280^{\circ}C$ and $230^{\circ}C$ for 1 hour. The specimens treated in the salt of 5% water were found to have higher tensile strength than that of the normal salt bath. Elongation and impact energy increased in proportion to the increase of retained austenite volume fraction. The increase of cooling rate of the salt by the addition of 5% water to the salt resulted in the increase of retained austenite volume fraction and the formation of fine bainitic ferrite.

The Effect of MBS on the Compatibility of Scrap PVB/PMMA Blends (Scrap PVB/PMMA 블렌드에 미치는 MBS의 상용화효과(相溶化效果))

  • Choi, Hyeong-Ki;Lee, Yong-Moo;Yoon, Ju-Ho;Choi, Sei-Young
    • Elastomers and Composites
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    • v.31 no.1
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    • pp.23-32
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    • 1996
  • PVB was blended with PMMA in order to recycle scraped PVB material which recovered in the safety glass manufactories. The purpose of this research on PVB/PMMA blend was applied with excellent tackiness and transparency of PVB as a material of high strength to make the maximum use. Also, the blending of PVB with PMMA was aimed at the increase of impact strength of PMMA because the elastic property of PVB might decrease the brittleness of PMMA due to the lack of inner impact resistance. Izod impact resistance was propotional to increase the content of PVB, which was predominantly increased in the addition of 10phr above MBS. High rate impact resistance showed a tendency to Increase but it showed a tendency to decrease maximum load and energy if the contents of PVB increased. On the other hand total energy and ductile index showed a tendency to increase excellent impact resistance in the addition of MBS contents. As a result of observed surface of PVB/PMMA blends, the size of PVB domain increased distribution homogenuously, in the addited MBS contents increased it showed distribution homogeneously and partially a wetability.

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A Study of Localization with Material Properties Using Numerical Method (재료의 특징에 따른 국부화에 대한 수치해석적 연구)

  • 황두순;이병섭;이용성;윤수진;홍성인
    • Transactions of Materials Processing
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    • v.9 no.4
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    • pp.395-403
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    • 2000
  • Formation of Shear Band under the adiabatic condition is widely observed In the engineering materials during rapidly forming process lot a thermally rate-dependent material. The shear band stems from evolution of a narrow region in which an intensive plastic flow occurs. The shear band often plays a role of a precursor of the ductile fracture during a forming process. The objective of this study is to investigate the localization behavior using numerical method. In this work, the implicit finite difference scheme is employed due to the ease of convergence and the numerical stability It is noted that physical and mechanical properties of materials determine how the shear band is formed and then localized. Material properties can be characterized with inertia number dissipation number and diffusion number. It is observed that the dimensionless numbers effect on localization. Using a parametric study, comparison was made between CRS-1018 steel with WHA (tungsten heavy alloy). The deformation behavior of material in this study include an isotropic hardening as well as thermal softening. Moreover, this study suggests that a kinematic hardening constitutive relation be required to predict a more accurate strain level at a shear band.

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Determination of K-R Curve for Steel Structure Hot-Rolled Thin Plates (일반구조용강 열간압연 박판에 대한 K-R 곡선 결정)

  • Lee, Eok-Seop;Lee, Gye-Seung;Baek, Jun-Ho;Pyeon, Jang-Sik
    • Journal of the Korean Society for Precision Engineering
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    • v.19 no.9
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    • pp.98-105
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    • 2002
  • Some materials exhibit a rising K-R curve, while the K-R curve for other materials is flat. The shape of the K-R curve depends on material behavior and, to a lesser extent, on the configuration of the cracked structure. The K-R curve for an ideally brittle material is flat because the surface energy is an invariant material property. However, the K-R curve can take on a variety of shapes when nonlinear material behavior accompanies fracture. Five different hot-rolled thin plates are tested to investigate K-R curve behavior. A special experimental apparatus is used to prevent specimens from buckling.

Analysis of crack occurs under unsteady pressure and temperature in a natural gas facility by applying FGM

  • Eltaher, Mohamed A.;Attia, Mohamed A.;Soliman, Ahmed E.;Alshorbagy, Amal E.
    • Structural Engineering and Mechanics
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    • v.66 no.1
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    • pp.97-111
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    • 2018
  • Cracking can lead to unexpected sudden failure of normally ductile metals subjected to a tensile stress, especially at elevated temperature. This article is raised to study the application of a composite material instead of the traditional carbon steel material used in the natural gas transmission pipeline because the cracks occurs in the pipeline initiate at its internal surface which is subjected to internal high fluctuated pressure and unsteady temperature according to actual operation conditions. Functionally graded material (FGM) is proposed to benefit from the ceramics durability and its surface hardness against erosion. FGM properties are graded at the radial direction. Finite element method (FEM) is applied and solved by ABAQUS software including FORTRAN subroutines adapted for this case of study. The stress intensity factor (SIF), temperatures and stresses are discussed to obtain the optimum FGM configuration under the actual conditions of pressure and temperature. Thermoelastic analysis of a plane strain model is adopted to study SIF and material response at various crack depths.

Mechanical Properties of an ECC(Engineered Cementitious Composite) Designed Based on Micromechanical Principle (마이크로역학에 의하여 설계된 ECC (Engineered Cementitious Composite)의 역학적 특성)

  • Kim Yun-Yong;Kim Jeong-Su;Kim Hee-Sin;Ha Gee-Joo;Kim Jin-Keun
    • Journal of the Korea Concrete Institute
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    • v.17 no.5 s.89
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    • pp.709-716
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    • 2005
  • The objective of this study is to develop a high ductile fiber reinforced mortar, ECC(Engineered Cementitious Composite) with using raw material commercially available in Korea. A single fiber pullout test and a wedge splitting test were employed to measure the bond properties in a matrix and the fracture toughness of mortar matrix respectively, which are used for designing mix proportion suitable for achieving strain-hardening behavior at a composite level. Test results showed that the properties tended to increase with decreasing water-cement ratio. A high ductile fiber reinforced mortar has been developed by employing micromechanics-based design procedure. Micromechanical analysis was initially peformed to properly select water-cement ratio, and then basic mixture proportion range was determined based on workability considerations, including desirable fiber dispersion without segregation. Subsequent direct tensile tests were performed on the composites with W/C's of 47.5% and 60% at 28 days that the fiber reinforced mortar exhibited high ductile uniaxial tension property, represented by a maximum strain capacity of 2.2%, which is around 100 times the strain capacity of normal concrete. Also, compressive tests were performed to examine high ductile fiber reinforced mortar under the compression. The test results showed that the measured value of compressive strength was from 26MPa to 34 MPa which comes under the strength of normal concrete at 28 days.

Finite Element Damage Analysis for Cast Stainless Steel (CF8M) Material Considering Variance in Experimental Data (Cast Stainless Steel (CF8M) 재료의 시험결과 분산을 고려한 유한요소 손상해석)

  • Jeon, Jun-Young;Kim, Nak-Hyun;Kim, Yun-Jae
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers A
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    • v.36 no.7
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    • pp.769-776
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    • 2012
  • The damage analysis method in this paper needs a material property and failure criteria. The material properties and the failure criteria could be easily obtained from the results of notched bar tensile tests carried out on other materials studied previously. However, for the cast stainless steel (CF8M) material in this paper, because of the variance in the results from notched bar tensile tests under the same conditions, the material property and the failure criteria could be obtained differently, depending on the analyzer. Therefore, a proper procedure that can confirm the material property and failure criteria are needed. In this work, the averaged material property was obtained from the notched bar with a 16-mm notch radius, and three failure criteria for CF8M material by finite element analysis were obtained. Applying the material property and the failure criteria, FE damage analysis for the J-R fracture toughness test was conducted. For validation, the simulated results were compared with the experimental results.