• Title/Summary/Keyword: extremely brittle

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A Proposal of Minimum Steel Ratio Considering Size Effect for Flexural Reinforced Concrete Member (크기효과가 고려된 철근콘크리트 휨 부재의 최소철근비 제안)

  • Yoo, Sung-Won;Her, Yoon
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Safety
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    • v.25 no.6
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    • pp.128-136
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    • 2010
  • In according with concrete structural design standard, it is common designing flexure reinforcement concrete to induce tension failure. So reinforcing ratio is limited to inducing tension failure. And maximum reinforcing ratio is regulated to protecting concrete compression strength caused by over reinforced building. Minimum reinforcing ratio is also limited in designing standard to protecting brittle failure as extremely using less reinforcing bar. But in minimum reinforcing ratio it is extremely conservative or it is sometimes impossible to induce stable tension-failure because they are depending on yield failure and experienced method and concrete designing standard strength. Therefore the purpose of the present paper is to evaluate the flexural behavior of minimum steel ratio of reinforced concrete of beams and to propose the guide-line of equation of minimum steel ratio by performing static flexural test of 16 beams according to size effect, number of steel, yielding stress of steel, and concrete compressive strength which are presumed effective variables. From experimental results, the equation of minimum steel ratio was newly proposed considered size effect.

Confinement Effects of High-Strength Reinforced Concrete Tied Columns

  • Han, Byum-Seok;Shin, Sung-Woo
    • International Journal of Concrete Structures and Materials
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    • v.18 no.2E
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    • pp.133-142
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    • 2006
  • An experimental study was conducted to investigate the effectiveness of transverse steel in reinforced concrete tied columns subjected to monotonically increasing axial compression. Eighteen large-scale columns($260{\times}260{\times}1,200mm$) were tested. Effects of such main variables as concrete compressive strength, configurations of transverse steel, transverse reinforcement ratio, spacing of transverse steel, and spalling of concrete cover were investigated. High-strength concrete columns under concentric axial loads show extremely brittle behavior unless the columns are confined with transverse steel that can provide sufficiently high lateral confinement pressure. A consistent decrease in the deformability of the column test specimens was observed with increasing concrete strength. Test results of this study were compared with existing confinement models of modified Kent-Park, Sheikh-Uzumeri, Mander, and Saatcioglu-Razvi. The comparison indicates many existing models to predict the behavior of confined concrete overestimate or underestimate the ductility of confined concrete.

A Study on the Mechanical Properties of Hybrid HPFRCs Using Micro and Macro Fibers (마이크로 및 매크로 섬유를 사용한 하이브리드 HPFRCC의 역학적 특성에 관한 연구)

  • Kim Jae Hwan;Lee Eui Bae;Kim Yong Sun;Kim Yong Duk;Joo Ji Hyun;Kim Moo Han
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2004.05a
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    • pp.276-279
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    • 2004
  • Concrete is one of the principal materials for the structure and it is widely used all over the world. but it shows extremely brittle failure under bending and tensile load. Recently to improve such a poor property. High Performance Fiber Reinforced Cementitious Composites (HPFRCC) have been developed. and it are defined by an ultimate strength higher than their first cracking strength and the formation of multiple cracking during the inelastic deformation process. This study is to develop the hybrid HPFRCC with high ductility and strain capacity in bending and tensile load. and the three-point bending test on hybrid HPRFCC reinforced with micro and macro fibers is carried out in this paper. As the results of the bending tests. hybrid HPFRCCs reinforced with PVA40+SF and PVA100+PVA660 showed the high ultimate bending stress, multiple cracks and displacement hardening under bending load.

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Size-Effect Analyses of Shear Behavior in Reinforced Concrete Beams (철근콘크리트 보의 전단거동의 크기효과 해석)

  • 변근주;하주형;송하원
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 1998.04a
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    • pp.321-326
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    • 1998
  • Shear failure of reinforced concrete beams is serious problem due to sudden brittle failure and many experimental results proved that size effect in shear behavior is an important feature of reinforced concrete members. For this reason, the structural safety of the reinforced concrete beams for shear has been checked by applying empirical design formula, which includes the size-effect, derived from experimental data. However, as the sizes of reinforced concrete members become extremely large, experiments sometimes become very difficult so that the formula or the experimental data could not be obtained and size-effect analyses of shear behavior become significant. In this study, size-effect analysis of shear behavior in reinforced concrete beams is performed by modeling tension stiffening/shear stiffening on reinforced concrete and the tension softening/shear softening on plain concrete. Then, the influences of models in the size-effect analyses of shear behavior in reinforced concrete beams are analyzed.

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Laser Drilling of High-Density Through Glass Vias (TGVs) for 2.5D and 3D Packaging

  • Delmdahl, Ralph;Paetzel, Rainer
    • Journal of the Microelectronics and Packaging Society
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    • v.21 no.2
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    • pp.53-57
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    • 2014
  • Thin glass (< 100 microns) is a promising material from which advanced interposers for high density electrical interconnects for 2.5D chip packaging can be produced. But thin glass is extremely brittle, so mechanical micromachining to create through glass vias (TGVs) is particularly challenging. In this article we show how laser processing using deep UV excimer lasers at a wavelength of 193 nm provides a viable solution capable of drilling dense patterns of TGVs with high hole counts. Based on mask illumination, this method supports parallel drilling of up over 1,000 through vias in 30 to $100{\mu}m$ thin glass sheets. (We also briefly discuss that ultrafast lasers are an excellent alternative for laser drilling of TGVs at lower pattern densities.) We present data showing that this process can deliver the requisite hole quality and can readily achieve future-proof TGV diameters as small $10{\mu}m$ together with a corresponding reduction in pitch size.

An Experimental Study on Mechanical Properties of Ductile Concrete with the Kinds of Aggregate (골재종류에 따른 고인성 콘크리트의 역학적 특성에 관한 실험적 연구)

  • Han Byung-chan;Yang Il-seung;Park Wan-shin;Lim Seung-chan;Morii Naoharu;Youn Hyun-do
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2005.05b
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    • pp.61-64
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    • 2005
  • Concrete is one of the principal materials for the structure and it is widely used all over the world, but it shows extremely brittle failure under bending and tensile load. Recently to improve such a poor property, Ductile Fiber Reinforced Cementitious Composites (DFRCC) have been developed, and it are defined by an ultimate strength higher than their first cracking strength and the formation of multiple cracking during the inelastic deformation process. This paper is to estimate experimentally the mechanical properties of ductile concrete with the kinds of used fine and coarse aggregate for purpose of development of high ductile concrete mixing coarse aggregate. As the results, ductile concrete mixed coarse aggregate showed the displacement-hardening behavior under bending load similar to DFRCC, and its compressive and bending performance varied according to the kinds of used coarse aggregate.

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The high-rate brittle microplane concrete model: Part II: application to projectile perforation of concrete slabs

  • Frank, Andreas O.;Adley, Mark D.;Danielson, Kent T.;McDevitt, Henry S. Jr.
    • Computers and Concrete
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    • v.9 no.4
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    • pp.311-325
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    • 2012
  • In this paper, we examine the behavior of the High-Rate Brittle Microplane (HRBM) concrete model based on a series of penetration experiments. These experiments were conducted with three different slab thicknesses (127, 216 and 254 mm) that provided a significant challenge for the numerical simulations. The 127 mm slab provided little resistance, the 216 mm slab provided nominal resistance and the 254 mm slab approached the perforation limit thickness of the projectile. These experiments provide a good baseline for evaluating material models since they have been shown to be extremely challenging; in fact, we have not encountered many material models that can provide quantitatively predictive results in terms of both projectile exit velocity and material damage. In a companion paper, we described the HRBM material model and its fit to various quasi-static material property data for WES-5000 concrete. In this paper, we show that, when adequately fit to these quasi-static data, the HRBM model does not have significant predictive capabilities, even though the quasi-static material fit may be exceptional. This was attributed to the rate-dependent response of the material. After various rate effects were introduced into the HRBM model, the quantitative predictive nature of the calculations dramatically increased. Unfortunately, not much rate-dependent material property data are in the literature; hence, accurate incorporation of rate effects into material models is difficult. Nonetheless, it seems that rate effects may be critical in obtaining an accurate response for concrete during projectile perforation events.

Mechanical safety evaluation of ceramic ball head for total hip replacement using finite element method (인공고관절 전치환술에서 세라믹 볼 헤드의 기계적 안정성 평가를 위한 유한요소 해석)

  • Han, Sung-Min;Chu, Jun-Uk;Chun, Heoung-Jae;Kim, Jung-Sung;Choi, Kui-Won;Youn, In-Chan
    • Journal of Biomedical Engineering Research
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    • v.31 no.6
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    • pp.449-455
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    • 2010
  • A ceramic articulating system in total hip replacement thought to be superior to metal-on-polyethylene due to its extremely low coefficient of friction and potential for high resistance to wear. But ceramic is brittle, which makes it mechanically and theoretically susceptible to fracture under certain mechanical conditions. In the current study, nine different models of ceramic ball heads were mechanically evaluated using 3D finite element(FE) analyses. It was found that the maximum stress in all ceramic models was lower than ceramic flexural strength, and it satisfied the requirements of the FDA Gaudience for artificial hip implant. Thus, ceramic ball head models introduced in the current study could be mechanically safe for clinical applications.

Evaluation of Ultrasonic Vibration Cutting while Machining Inconel 718

  • Nath, Chandra;Rahman, Mustafizur
    • International Journal of Precision Engineering and Manufacturing
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    • v.9 no.2
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    • pp.63-68
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    • 2008
  • Hard and brittle materials, such as Ni- and Ti-based alloys, glass, and ceramics, are very useful in aerospace, marine, electronics, and high-temperature applications because of their extremely versatile mechanical and chemical properties. One Ni-based alloy, Inconel 718, is a precipitation-hardenable material designed with exceptionally high yield strength, ultimate tensile strength, elastic modulus, and corrosion resistance with outstanding weldability and excellent creep-rupture properties at moderately high temperatures. However, conventional machining of this alloy presents a challenge to industry. Ultrasonic vibration cutting (UVC) has recently been used to cut this difficult-to-machine material and obtain a high quality surface finish. This paper describes an experimental study of the UVC parameters for Inconel 718, including the cutting force components, tool wear, chip formation, and surface roughness over a range of cutting conditions. A comparison was also made between conventional turning (CT) and UVC using scanning electron microscopy observations of tool wear. The tool wear measured during UVC at low cutting speeds was lower than CT. UVC resulted in better surface finishes compared to CT under the same cutting conditions. Therefore, UVC performed better than CT at low cutting speeds for all measures compared.

Measurement of Dynamic Fracture Toughness Using Chevron Notched Ceramic Specimen (세브론노치 세라믹시편을 이용한 동적파괴인성측정)

  • Lee, Yeon-Soo;Lee, Young-Sun;Park, Rae-Seok;Moon, Young-Deuk;Yoon, Hi-Seak
    • Journal of the Korean Society for Precision Engineering
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    • v.18 no.5
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    • pp.98-104
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    • 2001
  • A dynamic fracture toughness test method with a chevron notched ceramic specimens is proposed. The notch angles of the chevron specimens were 90, 100$^{\circ}$and 110$^{\circ}$. Finite element analysis(FEA) were done to determine the geometrical properties of chevron-notch specimens according to notch angles. The static fracture toughness of the chevron notched alumina specimen was 3.8MP$\alpha$√m similar to that of the general fracture specimen with a precrack. Dynamic fracture toughness was 4.5 MP$\alpha$√m slightly higher than the static one. These research showed the possibility of the split Hopkinson pressure bar test method using the newly proposed chevron notched specimens to get the dynamic fracture toughness of extremely brittle materials such as ceramics.

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