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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In this research, the chemical and mineralogical compositions, physical and mechanical properties, and failure mechanisms of two ordinary chondrite (OCs) meteorites Aba Panu (L3) and Viñales (L6), and the iron meteorite called Gibeon (IVA) were studied. OCs are dominated by anhydrous silicates with lesser amounts of sulfides and native Fe-Ni

In this research, the chemical and mineralogical compositions, physical and mechanical properties, and failure mechanisms of two ordinary chondrite (OCs) meteorites Aba Panu (L3) and Viñales (L6), and the iron meteorite called Gibeon (IVA) were studied. OCs are dominated by anhydrous silicates with lesser amounts of sulfides and native Fe-Ni metals, while Gibeon is primarily composed of Fe-Ni metals with scattered inclusions of graphite and troilite. The OCs were investigated to understand their response to compressive loading, using a three-dimensional (3-D) Digital Image Correlation (DIC) technique to measure full-field deformation and strain during compression. The DIC data were also used to identify the effects of mineralogical and structural heterogeneity on crack formation and growth. Even though Aba Panu and Viñales are mineralogically similar and are both classified as L ordinary chondrites, they exhibit differences in compressive strengths due to variations in chemical compositions, microstructure, and the presence of cracks and shock veins. DIC data of Aba Panu and Viñales show a brittle failure mechanism, consistent with the crack formation and growth from pre-existing microcracks and porosity. In contrast, the Fe-Ni phases of the Gibeon meteorite deform plastically without rupture during compression, whereas during tension, plastic deformations followed by necking lead to final failure. The Gibeon DIC results showed strain concentration in the tensile gauge region along the sample edge, resulting in the initiation of new damage surfaces that propagated perpendicular to the loading direction. Finally, an in-situ low-temperature testing method of iron meteorites was developed to study the response of their unique microstructure and failure mechanism.
ContributorsRabbi, Md Fazle (Author) / Chattopadhyay, Aditi (Thesis advisor) / Garvie, Laurence A.J. (Thesis advisor) / Liu, Yongming (Committee member) / Fard, Masoud Yekani (Committee member) / Cotto-Figueroa, Desiree (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Advanced Polymer and Ceramic Matrix Composites (PMCs and CMCs) are currently employed in a variety of airframe and engine applications. This includes PMC jet engine fan cases and CMC hot gas path turbine components. In an impact event, such as a jet engine fan blade-out, PMCs exhibit significant deformation-induced temperature

Advanced Polymer and Ceramic Matrix Composites (PMCs and CMCs) are currently employed in a variety of airframe and engine applications. This includes PMC jet engine fan cases and CMC hot gas path turbine components. In an impact event, such as a jet engine fan blade-out, PMCs exhibit significant deformation-induced temperature rises in addition to strain rate, temperature, and pressure dependence. CMC turbine components experience elevated temperatures, large thermal gradients, and sustained loading for long time periods in service, where creep is a major issue. However, the complex nature of woven and braided composites presents significant challenges for deformation, progressive damage, and failure prediction, particularly under extreme service conditions where global response is heavily driven by competing time and temperature dependent phenomena at the constituent level. In service, the constituents in these advanced composites experience history-dependent inelastic deformation, progressive damage, and failure, which drive global nonlinear constitutive behavior. In the case of PMCs, deformation-induced heating under impact conditions is heavily influenced by the matrix. The creep behavior of CMCs is a complex manifestation of time-dependent load transfer due to the differing creep rates of the constituents; simultaneous creep and relaxation at the constituent level govern macroscopic CMC creep. The disparity in length scales associated with the constituent materials, woven and braided tow architectures, and composite structural components therefore necessitates the development of robust multiscale computational tools. In this work, multiscale computational tools are developed to gain insight into the deformation, progressive damage, and failure of advanced PMCs and CMCs. This includes multiscale modeling of the impact response of PMCs, including adiabatic heating due to the conversion of plastic work to heat at the constituent level, as well as elevated temperature creep in CMCs as a result of time-dependent constituent load transfer. It is expected that the developed models and methods will provide valuable insight into the challenges associated with the design and certification of these advanced material systems.
ContributorsSorini, Christopher (Author) / Chattopadhyay, Adit (Thesis advisor) / Goldberg, Robert K (Committee member) / Liu, Yongming (Committee member) / Mignolet, Marc (Committee member) / Yekani-Fard, Masoud (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
Structural/system health monitoring (SHM) and prognostic health management (PHM) are vital techniques to ensure engineering system reliability and safety during the service. As multi-functionality and enhanced performance are in demand, modern engineering systems including aerospace, mechanical, and civil applications have become more complex. The constituent and architectural complexity, and multisource

Structural/system health monitoring (SHM) and prognostic health management (PHM) are vital techniques to ensure engineering system reliability and safety during the service. As multi-functionality and enhanced performance are in demand, modern engineering systems including aerospace, mechanical, and civil applications have become more complex. The constituent and architectural complexity, and multisource sensing sources in modern engineering systems may limit the monitoring capabilities of conventional approaches and require more advanced SHM/PHM techniques. Therefore, a hybrid methodology that incorporates information fusion, nondestructive evaluation (NDE), machine learning (ML), and statistical analysis is needed for more effective damage diagnosis/prognosis and system safety management.This dissertation presents an automated aviation health management technique to enable proactive safety management for both aircraft and national airspace system (NAS). A real-time, data-driven aircraft safety monitoring technique using ML models and statistical models is developed to enable an early-stage upset detection capability, which can improve pilot’s situational awareness and provide a sufficient safety margin. The detection accuracy and computational efficiency of the developed monitoring techniques is validated using commercial unlabeled flight data recorder (FDR) and reported accident FDR dataset. A stochastic post-upset prediction framework is developed using a high-fidelity flight dynamics model to predict the post-impacts in both aircraft and air traffic system. Stall upset scenarios that are most likely occurred during loss of control in-flight (LOC-I) operation are investigated, and stochastic flight envelopes and risk region are predicted to quantify their severities. In addition, a robust, automatic damage diagnosis technique using ultrasonic Lamb waves and ML models is developed to effectively detect and classify fatigue damage modes in composite structures. The dispersion and propagation characteristics of the Lamb waves in a composite plate are investigated. A deep autoencoder-based diagnosis technique is proposed to detect fatigue damage using anomaly detection approach and automatically extract damage sensitive features from the waves. The patterns in the features are then further analyzed using outlier detection approach to classify the fatigue damage modes. The developed diagnosis technique is validated through an in-situ fatigue tests with periodic active sensing. The developed techniques in this research are expected to be integrated with the existing safety strategies to enhance decision making process for improving engineering system safety without affecting the system’s functions.
ContributorsLee, Hyunseong (Author) / Chattopadhyay, Aditi (Thesis advisor) / Liu, Yongming (Committee member) / Papandreou-Suppappola, Antonia (Committee member) / Fard, Masoud Yekani (Committee member) / Tang, Pingbo (Committee member) / Campbell, Angela (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
Fiber reinforced composites are rapidly replacing conventional metallic or polymeric materials as materials of choice in a myriad of applications across a wide range of industries. The relatively low weight, high strength, high stiffness, and a variety of thermal and mechanical environmental and loading capabilities are in part what make

Fiber reinforced composites are rapidly replacing conventional metallic or polymeric materials as materials of choice in a myriad of applications across a wide range of industries. The relatively low weight, high strength, high stiffness, and a variety of thermal and mechanical environmental and loading capabilities are in part what make composite materials so appealing to material experts and design engineers. Additionally, fiber reinforced composites are highly tailorable and customized composite materials and structures can be readily designed for specific applications including those requiring particular directional material properties, fatigue resistance, damage tolerance, high temperature capabilities, or resistance to environmental degradation due to humidity and oxidation. The desirable properties of fiber reinforced composites arise from the strategic combination of multiple constituents to form a new composite material. However, the significant material anisotropy that occurs as a result of combining multiple constituents, each with different directional thermal and mechanical properties, complicates material analysis and remains a major impediment to fully understanding composite deformation and damage behavior. As a result, composite materials, especially specialized composites such as ceramic matrix composites and various multifunctional composites, are not utilized to their fullest potential. In the research presented in this dissertation, the deformation and damage behavior of several fiber reinforced composite systems were investigated. The damage accumulation and propagation behavior of carbon fiber reinforced polymer (CFRP) composites under complex in-phase biaxial fatigue loading conditions was investigated and the early stage damage and microscale damage were correlated to the eventual fatigue failure behavior and macroscale damage mechanisms. The temperature-dependent deformation and damage response of woven ceramic matrix composites (CMCs) reinforced with carbon and silicon carbide fibers was also studied. A fracture mechanics-informed continuum damage model was developed to capture the brittle damage behavior of the ceramic matrix. A multiscale thermomechanical simulation framework, consisting of cooldown simulations to capture a realistic material initial state and subsequent mechanical loading simulations to capture the temperature-dependent nonlinear stress-strain behavior, was also developed. The methodologies and results presented in this research represent substantial progress toward increasing understanding of the deformation and damage behavior of some key fiber reinforced composite materials.
ContributorsSkinner, Travis Dale (Author) / Chattopadhyay, Aditi (Thesis advisor) / Hall, Asha (Committee member) / Liu, Yongming (Committee member) / Jiao, Yang (Committee member) / Yekani-Fard, Masoud (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021