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  • 1
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    In:  Geophys. J. Int., Taipei, Ges. f. Geowissenschaften e.V., vol. 118, no. 16, pp. 285-304, pp. 1858, (ISSN 0343-5164)
    Publication Date: 1994
    Keywords: Waves ; Scattering ; Anisotropy ; Layers ; Channel waves ; GJI
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  • 2
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    In:  Bull. Seism. Soc. Am., Taipei, AGU, vol. 92, no. 3, pp. 1129-1135, pp. B06410, (ISSN: 1340-4202)
    Publication Date: 2002
    Keywords: Seismology ; Wave propagation ; Layers ; Modelling ; BSSA
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2016-06-07
    Description: Some results on the application of interface and Lamb waves for the study of curing of thin adhesive layers were summarized. In the case of thick substrates (thickness much more than the wave length) the interface waves can be used. In this case the experimental data can be inverted and the shear modulus of the adhesive film may be explicitly found based on the measured interface wave velocity. It is shown that interface waves can be used for the study of curing of structural adhesives as a function of different temperatures and other experimental conditions. The kinetics of curing was studied. In the case of thin substrates the wave phenomena are much more complicated. It is shown that for successful measurements proper selection of experimental conditions is very important. This can be done based on theoretical estimations. For correctly selected experimental conditions the Lamb waves may be a sensitive probe of adhesive bond quality and may be used or cure monitoring.
    Keywords: ACOUSTICS
    Type: NASA. Lewis Research Center Analytical Ultrasonics in Materials Research and Testing; p 299-310
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: The performance of high temperature composites can be significantly affected by the presence of residual stresses. These stresses arise during cooling processes from fabrication to room temperature due to mismatch of thermal expansion coefficients between matrix and fiber materials. This effect is especially pronounced in metal matrix and intermetallic composites. It can lead to plastic deformations, matrix cracking and fiber/matrix interface debonding. In this work the feasibility of ultrasonic techniques for residual stress assessment in composites is addressed. A novel technique for absolute stress determination in orthotropic materials from angular dependencies of ultrasonic velocities is described. The technique is applicable for determination of both applied and residual stresses and does not require calibration measurements on a reference sample. The important advantage of this method is that stress is determined simultaneously with stress-dependent elastic constants and is thus decoupled from the material texture. It is demonstrated that when the principal plane stress directions coincide with acoustical axes, the angular velocity data in the plane perpendicular to the stress plane may be used to determine both stress components. When the stress is off the acoustical axes, the shear and the difference of the normal stress components may be determined from the angular dependence of group velocities in the plane of stresses. Synthetic sets of experimental data corresponding to materials with different anisotropy and stress levels are used to check the applicability of the technique. The method is also verified experimentally. A high precision ultrasonic wave transmission technique is developed to measure angular dependence of ultrasonic velocities. Examples of stress determination from experimental velocity data are given. A method is presented for determination of velocities of ultrasonic waves propagating through the composite material with residual stresses. It is based on the generalized self-consistent multiple scattering model. Calculation results for longitudinal and shear ultrasonic wave velocities propagating perpendicular to the fibers direction in SCS-6/Ti composite with and without residual stresses are presented. They show that velocity changes due to presence of stresses are of order 1%.
    Keywords: Structural Mechanics
    Type: NASA/CR-97-206375 , NAS 1.26:206375
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: In this paper we present an experimental and theoretical study of the effect of microcrack damage on ceramic properties. For the experimental investigation, ceramic samples of aluminum oxide and reaction bonded silicon nitride (RBSN) are used. Thermal shock treatment from different temperatures up to 1000 C is applied to produce the microcracks. Both surface and bulk ultrasonic wave methods are used to correlate the change of elastic constants to microstructural degradation and to determine the change in elastic anisotropy induced by microcrack damage. For the theoretical investigation, damage mechanics, which relates microstructural damage to material service life and mechanical failure, is used. The change in elastic properties due to microcrack damage calculated from the theoretical model is compared with the experimental results for determination of the applicability of damage theory. It is shown that two independent experimental methods (bulk wave and surface wave) give the same results for shear moduli of damaged ceramics. The experimental results aagree reasonably well with the moduli predicted from the cracked solid model.
    Keywords: NONMETALLIC MATERIALS
    Type: ; : Spaceflight mechan
    Format: text
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Ultrasonic techniques are employed to develop methods for nondestructive evaluation of elastic properties and damage in SiC/RBSN composites. To incorporate imperfect boundary conditions between fibers and matrix into a micromechanical model, a model of fibers having effective anisotropic properties is introduced. By inverting Hashin's (1979) microstructural model for a composite material with microscopic constituents the effective fiber properties were found from ultrasonic measurements. Ultrasonic measurements indicate that damage due to thermal shock is located near the surface, so the surface wave is most appropriate for estimation of the ultimate strength reduction and critical temperature of thermal shock. It is concluded that bonding between laminates of SiC/RBSN composites is severely weakened by thermal oxidation. Generally, nondestructive evaluation of thermal oxidation effects and thermal shock shows good correlation with measurements previously performed by destructive methods.
    Keywords: COMPOSITE MATERIALS
    Type: In: Review of progress in quantitative nondestructive evaluation. Vol. 11B; Proceedings of the 18th Annual Review, Brunswick, ME, July 28-Aug. 2, 1991 (A93-19582 06-38); p. 1531-1538.
    Format: text
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: A nondestructive method is introduced to determine the effective elastic of fiber-matrix interphases from measured composite moduli. The composite moduli are obtained by measuring the angular dependences of ultrasonic longitudinal and transverse phase velocities in planes along and perpendicular to the fibers. Three independent interphase effective moduli are found using micromechanical multiphase models which were applied after averaging composite transverse moduli to account for the composite orthotropy. Sensitivity analysis shows that errors in the calculated interphasial moduli are approximately ten times those in the composite moduli. Experiments are performed on Si3N4 ceramic and Ti-24Al-11Nb intermetallic matrix composites reinforced with carbon coated silicon carbide fibers. The experimental interphasial moduli for the intermetallic composites agree with literature data after accounting for the interphase microstructure. The interphasial moduli for ceramic composites are lower than those for the intermetallic composite due to imperfect mechanical contact between the interphase and the porous matrix. The use of the method to assess the interphase degradation is demonstrated for interphasial oxidation damage. The analysis helps to determine the morphology of the damaged interphase.
    Keywords: QUALITY ASSURANCE AND RELIABILITY
    Type: Journal of Applied Physics (ISSN 0021-8979); 76; 7; p. 4121-4129
    Format: text
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: The inverse determination of imperfect interfaces from reflection spectra of normal and oblique incident ultrasonic waves in adhesive bonds of multidirectional composites is investigated. The oblique measurements are complicated by the highly dispersed nature of oblique wave spectra at frequencies above 3MHz. Different strategies for bond property reconstruction, including a modulation method, are discussed. The relation of measured interfacial spring density to the physico-chemical model of a composite interface described by polymer molecular bonds to emulate loss of molecular strength on an adhesive composite interface is discussed. This potentially relates the interfacial (adhesion) strength (number of bonds at the adhesive substrate interface) to the spring constant (stiffness) area density (flux), which is an ultrasonically measurable parameter.
    Keywords: Composite Materials
    Type: NF1676L-11311 , 37th Annual Review of Progress in QNDE; Jul 18, 2010 - Jul 23, 2010; San Diego, CA; United States
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: A new approach to characterizing oxidation damage in ceramic matrix composites using ultrasonic techniques is proposed. In this approach, the elastic constants of the composite are determined nondestructively by measuring the angular dependence of both longitudinal and transverse wave velocities. A micromechanical model for composites with anisotropic constituents is used to find the anisotropic properties of an effective fiber, which is a combination of the fiber and the interface. Interfacial properties are extracted from the properties of this effective fiber by analyzing the difference between effective and actual fiber properties. Unidirectional /0/28 SiC/Si3N4 composites with 30 percent fiber volume fraction and 30 percent matrix porosity are used. The samples are exposed in a flowing oxygen environment at elevated temperatures, up to 1400 C, for 100 hours and then measured by ultrasonic methods at room temperature. The Young's modulus in the fiber direction of the sample oxidized at 600 C decreased significantly but it was unchanged for samples oxidized at temperatures above 1200 C. The transverse moduli obtained from ultrasonic measurements decrease continuously up to 1200 C. The shear stiffnesses show behavior similar to the transverse moduli. The effective elastic moduli of the interfacial carbon coating are determined from the experimental data, and their change due to thermal oxidation is discussed.
    Keywords: COMPOSITE MATERIALS
    Type: ASME, Transactions, Journal of Engineering Materials and Technology (ISSN 0094-4289); 115; 3; p. 237-243.
    Format: text
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: In this report analytical and numerical methods are proposed to estimate the effective elastic properties of regular and random open-cell foams. The methods are based on the principle of minimum energy and on structural beam models. The analytical solutions are obtained using symbolic processing software. The microstructure of the random foam is simulated using Voronoi tessellation together with a rate-dependent random close-packing algorithm. The statistics of the geometrical properties of random foams corresponding to different packing fractions have been studied. The effects of the packing fraction on elastic properties of the foams have been investigated by decomposing the compliance into bending and axial compliance components. It is shown that the bending compliance increases and the axial compliance decreases when the packing fraction increases. Keywords: Foam; Elastic properties; Finite element; Randomness
    Keywords: Numerical Analysis
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