This collection includes both ASU Theses and Dissertations, submitted by graduate students, and the Barrett, Honors College theses submitted by undergraduate students. 

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Description
In material science, microstructure plays a key role in determining properties, which further determine utility of the material. However, effectively measuring microstructure evolution in real time remains an challenge. To date, a wide range of advanced experimental techniques have been developed and applied to characterize material microstructure and structural evolution

In material science, microstructure plays a key role in determining properties, which further determine utility of the material. However, effectively measuring microstructure evolution in real time remains an challenge. To date, a wide range of advanced experimental techniques have been developed and applied to characterize material microstructure and structural evolution on different length and time scales. Most of these methods can only resolve 2D structural features within a narrow range of length scale and for a single or a series of snapshots. The currently available 3D microstructure characterization techniques are usually destructive and require slicing and polishing the samples each time a picture is taken. Simulation methods, on the other hand, are cheap, sample-free and versatile without the special necessity of taking care of the physical limitations, such as extreme temperature or pressure, which are prominent

issues for experimental methods. Yet the majority of simulation methods are limited to specific circumstances, for example, first principle computation can only handle several thousands of atoms, molecular dynamics can only efficiently simulate a few seconds of evolution of a system with several millions particles, and finite element method can only be used in continuous medium, etc. Such limitations make these individual methods far from satisfaction to simulate macroscopic processes that a material sample undergoes up to experimental level accuracy. Therefore, it is highly desirable to develop a framework that integrate different simulation schemes from various scales

to model complicated microstructure evolution and corresponding properties. Guided by such an objective, we have made our efforts towards incorporating a collection of simulation methods, including finite element method (FEM), cellular automata (CA), kinetic Monte Carlo (kMC), stochastic reconstruction method, Discrete Element Method (DEM), etc, to generate an integrated computational material engineering platform (ICMEP), which could enable us to effectively model microstructure evolution and use the simulated microstructure to do subsequent performance analysis. In this thesis, we will introduce some cases of building coupled modeling schemes and present

the preliminary results in solid-state sintering. For example, we use coupled DEM and kinetic Monte Carlo method to simulate solid state sintering, and use coupled FEM and cellular automata method to model microstrucutre evolution during selective laser sintering of titanium alloy. Current results indicate that joining models from different length and time scales is fruitful in terms of understanding and describing microstructure evolution of a macroscopic physical process from various perspectives.
ContributorsChen, Shaohua (Author) / Jiao, Yang (Thesis advisor) / Wang, Qinghua (Committee member) / Emady, Heather (Committee member) / Gel, Aytekin (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
Composite materials are now beginning to provide uses hitherto reserved for metals in structural systems such as airframes and engine containment systems, wraps for repair and rehabilitation, and ballistic/blast mitigation systems. These structural systems are often subjected to impact loads and there is a pressing need for accurate prediction of

Composite materials are now beginning to provide uses hitherto reserved for metals in structural systems such as airframes and engine containment systems, wraps for repair and rehabilitation, and ballistic/blast mitigation systems. These structural systems are often subjected to impact loads and there is a pressing need for accurate prediction of deformation, damage and failure. There are numerous material models that have been developed to analyze the dynamic impact response of polymer matrix composites. However, there are key features that are missing in those models that prevent them from providing accurate predictive capabilities. In this dissertation, a general purpose orthotropic elasto-plastic computational constitutive material model has been developed to predict the response of composites subjected to high velocity impacts. The constitutive model is divided into three components – deformation model, damage model and failure model, with failure to be added at a later date. The deformation model generalizes the Tsai-Wu failure criteria and extends it using a strain-hardening-based orthotropic yield function with a non-associative flow rule. A strain equivalent formulation is utilized in the damage model that permits plastic and damage calculations to be uncoupled and capture the nonlinear unloading and local softening of the stress-strain response. A diagonal damage tensor is defined to account for the directionally dependent variation of damage. However, in composites it has been found that loading in one direction can lead to damage in multiple coordinate directions. To account for this phenomena, the terms in the damage matrix are semi-coupled such that the damage in a particular coordinate direction is a function of the stresses and plastic strains in all of the coordinate directions. The overall framework is driven by experimental tabulated temperature and rate-dependent stress-strain data as well as data that characterizes the damage matrix and failure. The developed theory has been implemented in a commercial explicit finite element analysis code, LS-DYNA®, as MAT213. Several verification and validation tests using a commonly available carbon-fiber composite, Toyobo’s T800/F3900, have been carried and the results show that the theory and implementation are efficient, robust and accurate.
ContributorsHoffarth, Canio (Author) / Rajan, Subramaniam D. (Thesis advisor) / Goldberg, Robert (Committee member) / Neithalath, Narayanan (Committee member) / Mobasher, Barzin (Committee member) / Liu, Yongming (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016
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Description
Ultrasound has become one of the most popular non-destructive characterization tools for soft materials. Compared to conventional ultrasound imaging, quantitative ultrasound has the potential of analyzing detailed microstructural variation through spectral analysis. Because of having a better axial and lateral resolution, and high attenuation coefficient, quantitative high-frequency ultrasound analysis (HFUA)

Ultrasound has become one of the most popular non-destructive characterization tools for soft materials. Compared to conventional ultrasound imaging, quantitative ultrasound has the potential of analyzing detailed microstructural variation through spectral analysis. Because of having a better axial and lateral resolution, and high attenuation coefficient, quantitative high-frequency ultrasound analysis (HFUA) is a very effective tool for small-scale penetration depth application. One of the QUS parameters, peak density had recently shown a promising response with the variation in the soft material microstructure. Acoustic scattering is arguably the most important factor behind different parametric responses in ultrasound spectra. Therefore, to evaluate peak density, acoustic scattering at different frequency levels was investigated. Analytical, computational, and experimental analysis was conducted to observe both single and multiple scattering in different microstructural setups. It was observed that peak density was an effective tool to express different levels of acoustic scattering that occurred through microstructural variation. The feasibility of the peak density parameter was further evaluated in ultrasound C-scan imaging. The study was also extended to detect the relative position of the imaged structure in the direction of wave propagation. For this purpose, a derivative parameter of peak density named mean peak to valley distance (MPVD) was developed to address the limitations of peak density. The study was then focused on detecting soft tissue malignancy. The histology-based computational study of HFUA was conducted to detect various breast tumor (soft tissue) grades. It was observed that both peak density and MPVD parameters could identify tumor grades at a certain level. Finally, the study was focused on evaluating the feasibility of ultrasound parameters to detect asymptotic breast carcinoma i.e., ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) in the surgical margin of the breast tumor. In that computational study, breast pathologies were modeled by including all the phases of DCIS. From the similar analysis mentioned above, it was understood that both peak density and MPVD parameters could detect various breast pathologies like ductal hyperplasia, DCIS, and calcification during intraoperative margin analysis. Furthermore, the spectral features of the frequency spectrums from various pathologies also provided significant information to identify them conclusively.
ContributorsPaul, Koushik (Author) / Ladani, Leila (Thesis advisor) / Razmi, Jafar (Committee member) / Holloway, Julianne (Committee member) / Li, Xiangjia (Committee member) / Liu, Yongming (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Special thermal interface materials are required for connecting devices that operate at high temperatures up to 300°C. Because devices used in power electronics, such as GaN, SiC, and other wide bandgap semiconductors, can reach very high temperatures (beyond 250°C), a high melting point, and high thermal & electrical conductivity are

Special thermal interface materials are required for connecting devices that operate at high temperatures up to 300°C. Because devices used in power electronics, such as GaN, SiC, and other wide bandgap semiconductors, can reach very high temperatures (beyond 250°C), a high melting point, and high thermal & electrical conductivity are required for the thermal interface material. Traditional solder materials for packaging cannot be used for these applications as they do not meet these requirements. Sintered nano-silver is a good candidate on account of its high thermal and electrical conductivity and very high melting point. The high temperature operating conditions of these devices lead to very high thermomechanical stresses that can adversely affect performance and also lead to failure. A number of these devices are mission critical and, therefore, there is a need for very high reliability. Thus, computational and nondestructive techniques and design methodology are needed to determine, characterize, and design the packages. Actual thermal cycling tests can be very expensive and time consuming. It is difficult to build test vehicles in the lab that are very close to the production level quality and therefore making comparisons or making predictions becomes a very difficult exercise. Virtual testing using a Finite Element Analysis (FEA) technique can serve as a good alternative. In this project, finite element analysis is carried out to help achieve this objective. A baseline linear FEA is performed to determine the nature and magnitude of stresses and strains that occur during the sintering step. A nonlinear coupled thermal and mechanical analysis is conducted for the sintering step to study the behavior more accurately and in greater detail. Damage and fatigue analysis are carried out for multiple thermal cycling conditions. The results are compared with the actual results from a prior study. A process flow chart outlining the FEA modeling process is developed as a template for the future work. A Coffin-Manson type relationship is developed to help determine the accelerated aging conditions and predict life for different service conditions.
ContributorsAmla, Tarun (Author) / Chawla, Nikhilesh (Thesis advisor) / Jiao, Yang (Committee member) / Liu, Yongming (Committee member) / Zhuang, Houlong (Committee member) / Jiang, Hanqing (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020