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The Very High Temperature Reactor (VHTR) is one of six conceptual designs proposed for Generation IV nuclear reactors. Alloy 617, a solid solution strengthened Ni-base superalloy, is currently the primary candidate material for the tubing of the Intermediate Heat Exchanger (IHX) in the VHTR design. Steady-state operation of the nuclear

The Very High Temperature Reactor (VHTR) is one of six conceptual designs proposed for Generation IV nuclear reactors. Alloy 617, a solid solution strengthened Ni-base superalloy, is currently the primary candidate material for the tubing of the Intermediate Heat Exchanger (IHX) in the VHTR design. Steady-state operation of the nuclear power plant at elevated temperatures leads to creep deformation, whereas loading transients including startup and shutdown generate fatigue. A detailed understanding of the creep-fatigue interaction in Alloy 617 is necessary before it can be considered as a material for nuclear construction in ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code. Current design codes for components undergoing creep-fatigue interaction at elevated temperatures require creep-fatigue testing data covering the entire range from fatigue-dominant to creep-dominant loading. Classical strain-controlled tests, which produce stress relaxation during the hold period, show a saturation in cycle life with increasing hold periods due to the rapid stress-relaxation of Alloy 617 at high temperatures. Therefore, applying longer hold time in these tests cannot generate creep-dominated failure. In this study, uniaxial isothermal creep-fatigue tests with non-traditional loading waveforms were designed and performed at 850 and 950°C, with an objective of generating test data in the creep-dominant regime. The new loading waveforms are hybrid strain-controlled and force-controlled testing which avoid stress relaxation during the creep hold. The experimental data showed varying proportions of creep and fatigue damage, and provided evidence for the inadequacy of the widely-used time fraction rule for estimating creep damage under creep-fatigue conditions. Micro-scale damage features in failed test specimens, such as fatigue cracks and creep voids, were quantified using a Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) to find a correlation between creep and fatigue damage. Quantitative statistical imaging analysis showed that the microstructural damage features (cracks and voids) are correlated with a new mechanical driving force parameter. The results from this image-based damage analysis were used to develop a phenomenological life-prediction methodology called the effective time fraction approach. Finally, the constitutive creep-fatigue response of the material at 950°C was modeled using a unified viscoplastic model coupled with a damage accumulation model. The simulation results were used to validate an energy-based constitutive life-prediction model, as a mechanistic model for potential component and structure level creep-fatigue analysis.
ContributorsTahir, Fraaz (Author) / Liu, Yongming (Thesis advisor) / Jiang, Hanqing (Committee member) / Rajagopalan, Jagannathan (Committee member) / Oswald, Jay (Committee member) / Jiao, Yang (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
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Description
Cellular metamaterials arouse broad scientific interests due to the combination of host material and structure together to achieve a wide range of physical properties rarely found in nature. Stochastic foam as one subset has been considered as a competitive candidate for versatile applications including heat exchangers, battery electrodes, automotive, catalyst

Cellular metamaterials arouse broad scientific interests due to the combination of host material and structure together to achieve a wide range of physical properties rarely found in nature. Stochastic foam as one subset has been considered as a competitive candidate for versatile applications including heat exchangers, battery electrodes, automotive, catalyst devices, magnetic shielding, etc. For the engineering of the cellular foam architectures, closed-form models that can be used to predict the mechanical and thermal properties of foams are highly desired especially for the recently developed ultralight weight shellular architectures. Herein, for the first time, a novel packing three-dimensional (3D) hollow pentagonal dodecahedron (HPD) model is proposed to simulate the cellular architecture with hollow struts. An electrochemical deposition process is utilized to manufacture the metallic hollow foam architecture. Mechanical and thermal testing of the as-manufactured foams are carried out to compare with the HPD model. Timoshenko beam theory is utilized to verify and explain the derived power coefficient relation. Our HPD model is proved to accurately capture both the topology and the physical properties of hollow stochastic foam. Understanding how the novel HPD model packing helps break the conventional impression that 3D pentagonal topology cannot fulfill the space as a representative volume element. Moreover, the developed HPD model can predict the mechanical and thermal properties of the manufactured hollow metallic foams and elucidating of how the inevitable manufacturing defects affect the physical properties of the hollow metallic foams. Despite of the macro-scale stochastic foam architecture, nano gradient gyroid lattices are studied using Molecular Dynamics (MD) simulation. The simulation result reveals that, unlike homogeneous architecture, gradient gyroid not only shows novel layer-by-layer deformation behavior, but also processes significantly better energy absorption ability. The deformation behavior and energy absorption are predictable and designable, which demonstrate its highly programmable potential.
ContributorsDai, Rui (Author) / Nian, Qiong (Thesis advisor) / Jiao, Yang (Committee member) / Kwon, Beomjin (Committee member) / Liu, Yongming (Committee member) / Phelan, Patrick (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
Ultra-fast 2D/3D material microstructure reconstruction and quantitative structure-property mapping are crucial components of integrated computational material engineering (ICME). It is particularly challenging for modeling random heterogeneous materials such as alloys, composites, polymers, porous media, and granular matters, which exhibit strong randomness and variations of their material properties due to

Ultra-fast 2D/3D material microstructure reconstruction and quantitative structure-property mapping are crucial components of integrated computational material engineering (ICME). It is particularly challenging for modeling random heterogeneous materials such as alloys, composites, polymers, porous media, and granular matters, which exhibit strong randomness and variations of their material properties due to the hierarchical uncertainties associated with their complex microstructure at different length scales. Such uncertainties also exist in disordered hyperuniform systems that are statistically isotropic and possess no Bragg peaks like liquids and glasses, yet they suppress large-scale density fluctuations in a similar manner as in perfect crystals. The unique hyperuniform long-range order in these systems endow them with nearly optimal transport, electronic and mechanical properties. The concept of hyperuniformity was originally introduced for many-particle systems and has subsequently been generalized to heterogeneous materials such as porous media, composites, polymers, and biological tissues for unconventional property discovery. An explicit mixture random field (MRF) model is proposed to characterize and reconstruct multi-phase stochastic material property and microstructure simultaneously, where no additional tuning step nor iteration is needed compared with other stochastic optimization approaches such as the simulated annealing. The proposed method is shown to have ultra-high computational efficiency and only requires minimal imaging and property input data. Considering microscale uncertainties, the material reliability will face the challenge of high dimensionality. To deal with the so-called “curse of dimensionality”, efficient material reliability analysis methods are developed. Then, the explicit hierarchical uncertainty quantification model and efficient material reliability solvers are applied to reliability-based topology optimization to pursue the lightweight under reliability constraint defined based on structural mechanical responses. Efficient and accurate methods for high-resolution microstructure and hyperuniform microstructure reconstruction, high-dimensional material reliability analysis, and reliability-based topology optimization are developed. The proposed framework can be readily incorporated into ICME for probabilistic analysis, discovery of novel disordered hyperuniform materials, material design and optimization.
ContributorsGao, Yi (Author) / Liu, Yongming (Thesis advisor) / Jiao, Yang (Committee member) / Ren, Yi (Committee member) / Pan, Rong (Committee member) / Mignolet, Marc (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
Applications such as heat exchangers, surface-based cellular structures, rotating blades, and waveguides rely on thin metal walls as crucial constituent elements of the structure. The design freedom enabled by laser powder bed fusion has led to an interest in exploiting this technology to further the performance of these components, many

Applications such as heat exchangers, surface-based cellular structures, rotating blades, and waveguides rely on thin metal walls as crucial constituent elements of the structure. The design freedom enabled by laser powder bed fusion has led to an interest in exploiting this technology to further the performance of these components, many of which retain their as-built surface morphologies on account of their design complexity. However, there is limited understanding of how and why mechanical properties vary by wall thickness for specimens that are additively manufactured and maintain an as-printed surface finish. Critically, the contributions of microstructure and morphology to the mechanical behavior of thin wall laser powder bed fusion structures have yet to be systematically identified and decoupled. This work focuses on elucidating the room temperature quasi-static tensile and high cycle fatigue properties of as-printed, thin-wall Inconel 718 fabricated using laser powder bed fusion, with the aim of addressing this critical gap in the literature. Wall thicknesses studied range from 0.3 - 2.0 mm, and the effects of Hot Isostatic Pressing are also examined, with sheet metal specimens used as a baseline for comparison. Statistical analyses are conducted to identify the significance of the dependence of properties on wall thickness and Hot Isostatic Pressing, as well as to examine correlations of these properties to section area, porosity, and surface roughness. A thorough microstructural study is complemented with a first-of-its-kind study of surface morphology to decouple their contributions and identify underlying causes for observed changes in mechanical properties. This thesis finds that mechanical properties in the quasi-static and fatigue framework do not see appreciable declines until specimen thickness is under 0.75 mm in thickness. The added Hot Isostatic Pressing heat treatment effectively closed pores, recrystallized the grain structure, and provided a more homogenous microstructure that benefits the modulus, tensile strength, elongation, and fatigue performance at higher stresses. Stress heterogeneities, primarily caused by surface defects, negatively affected the thinner specimens disproportionately. Without the use of the Hot Isostatic Pressing, the grain structure remained much more refined and benefitted the yield strength and fatigue endurance limit.
ContributorsParadise, Paul David (Author) / Bhate, Dhruv (Thesis advisor) / Chawla, Nikhilesh (Committee member) / Azeredo, Bruno (Committee member) / Jiao, Yang (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Intelligent engineering designs require an accurate understanding of material behavior, since any uncertainties or gaps in knowledge must be counterbalanced with heightened factors of safety, leading to overdesign. Therefore, building better structures and pushing the performance of new components requires an improved understanding of the thermomechanical response of advanced materials

Intelligent engineering designs require an accurate understanding of material behavior, since any uncertainties or gaps in knowledge must be counterbalanced with heightened factors of safety, leading to overdesign. Therefore, building better structures and pushing the performance of new components requires an improved understanding of the thermomechanical response of advanced materials under service conditions. This dissertation provides fundamental investigations of several advanced materials: thermoset polymers, a common matrix material for fiber-reinforced composites and nanocomposites; aluminum alloy 7075-T6 (AA7075-T6), a high-performance aerospace material; and ceramic matrix composites (CMCs), an advanced composite for extreme-temperature applications. To understand matrix interactions with various interfaces and nanoinclusions at their fundamental scale, the properties of thermoset polymers are studied at the atomistic scale. An improved proximity-based molecular dynamics (MD) technique for modeling the crosslinking of thermoset polymers is carefully established, enabling realistic curing simulations through its ability to dynamically and probabilistically perform complex topology transformations. The proximity-based MD curing methodology is then used to explore damage initiation and the local anisotropic evolution of mechanical properties in thermoset polymers under uniaxial tension with an emphasis on changes in stiffness through a series of tensile loading, unloading, and reloading experiments. Aluminum alloys in aerospace applications often require a fatigue life of over 109 cycles, which is well over the number of cycles that can be practically tested using conventional fatigue testing equipment. In order to study these high-life regimes, a detailed ultrasonic cycle fatigue study is presented for AA7075-T6 under fully reversed tension-compression loading. The geometric sensitivity, frequency effects, size effects, surface roughness effects, and the corresponding failure mechanisms for ultrasonic fatigue across different fatigue regimes are investigated. Finally, because CMCs are utilized in extreme environments, oxidation plays an important role in their degradation. A multiphysics modeling methodology is thus developed to address the complex coupling between oxidation, mechanical stress, and oxygen diffusion in heterogeneous carbon fiber-reinforced CMC microstructures.
ContributorsSchichtel, Jacob (Author) / Chattopadhyay, Aditi (Thesis advisor) / Dai, Lenore (Committee member) / Ghoshal, Anindya (Committee member) / Huang, Huei-Ping (Committee member) / Jiao, Yang (Committee member) / Oswald, Jay (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
In this dissertation, two types of passive air freshener products from Henkel, the wick-based air freshener and gel-based air freshener, are studied for their wicking mechanisms and evaporation performances.The fibrous pad of the wick-based air freshener is a porous medium that absorbs fragrance by capillary force and releases the fragrance

In this dissertation, two types of passive air freshener products from Henkel, the wick-based air freshener and gel-based air freshener, are studied for their wicking mechanisms and evaporation performances.The fibrous pad of the wick-based air freshener is a porous medium that absorbs fragrance by capillary force and releases the fragrance into the ambient air. To investigate the wicking process, a two-dimensional multiphase flow numerical model using COMSOL Multiphysics is built. Saturation and liquid pressure inside the pad are solved. Comparison between the simulation results and experiments shows that evaporation occurs simultaneously with the wicking process. The evaporation performance on the surface of the wicking pad is analyzed based on the kinetic theory, from which the mass flow rate of molecules passing the interface of each pore of the porous medium is obtained. A 3D model coupling the evaporation model and dynamic wicking on the evaporation pad is built to simulate the entire performance of the air freshener to the environment for a long period of time. Diffusion and natural convection effects are included in the simulation. The simulation results match well with the experiments for both the air fresheners placed in a chamber and in the absent of a chamber, the latter of which is subject to indoor airflow. The gel-based air freshener can be constructed as a porous medium in which the solid network of particles spans the volume of the fragrance liquid. To predict the evaporation performance of the gel, two approaches are tested for gel samples in hemispheric shape. The first approach is the sessile drop model commonly used for the drying process of a pure liquid droplet. It can be used to estimate the weight loss rate and time duration of the evaporation. Another approach is to simulate the concentration profile outside the gel and estimate the evaporation rate from the surface of the gel using the kinetic theory. The evaporation area is updated based on the change of pore size. A 3D simulation using the same analysis is further applied to the cylindrical gel sample. The simulation results match the experimental data well.
ContributorsYuan, Jing (Author) / Chen, Kangping (Thesis advisor) / Herrmann, Marcus (Committee member) / Huang, Huei-Ping (Committee member) / Wang, Liping (Committee member) / Jiao, Yang (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
The design of energy absorbing structures is driven by application specific requirements like the amount of energy to be absorbed, maximum transmitted stress that is permissible, stroke length, and available enclosing space. Cellular structures like foams are commonly leveraged in nature for energy absorption and have also found use in

The design of energy absorbing structures is driven by application specific requirements like the amount of energy to be absorbed, maximum transmitted stress that is permissible, stroke length, and available enclosing space. Cellular structures like foams are commonly leveraged in nature for energy absorption and have also found use in engineering applications. With the possibility of manufacturing complex cellular shapes using additive manufacturing technologies, there is an opportunity to explore new topologies that improve energy absorption performance. This thesis aims to systematically understand the relationships between four key elements: (i) unit cell topology, (ii) material composition, (iii) relative density, and (iv) fields; and energy absorption behavior, and then leverage this understanding to develop, implement and validate a methodology to design the ideal cellular structure energy absorber. After a review of the literature in the domain of additively manufactured cellular materials for energy absorption, results from quasi-static compression of six cellular structures (hexagonal honeycomb, auxetic and Voronoi lattice, and diamond, Gyroid, and Schwarz-P) manufactured out of AlSi10Mg and Nylon-12. These cellular structures were compared to each other in the context of four design-relevant metrics to understand the influence of cell design on the deformation and failure behavior. Three new and revised metrics for energy absorption were proposed to enable more meaningful comparisons and subsequent design selection. Triply Periodic Minimal Surface (TPMS) structures were found to have the most promising overall performance and formed the basis for the numerical investigation of the effect of fields on the energy absorption performance of TPMS structures. A continuum shell-based methodology was developed to analyze the large deformation behavior of field-driven variable thickness TPMS structures and validated against experimental data. A range of analytical and stochastic fields were then evaluated that modified the TPMS structure, some of which were found to be effective in enhancing energy absorption behavior in the structures while retaining the same relative density. Combining findings from studies on the role of cell geometry, composition, relative density, and fields, this thesis concludes with the development of a design framework that can enable the formulation of cellular material energy absorbers with idealized behavior.
ContributorsShinde, Mandar (Author) / Bhate, Dhruv (Thesis advisor) / Peralta, Pedro (Committee member) / Liu, Yongming (Committee member) / Jiao, Yang (Committee member) / Kwon, Beomjin (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Fatigue fracture is one of the most common types of mechanical failures seen in structures. Considering that fatigue failures usually initiate on surfaces, it is accepted that surface roughness has a detrimental effect on the fatigue life of components. Irregularities on the surface cause stress concentrations and form nucleation sites

Fatigue fracture is one of the most common types of mechanical failures seen in structures. Considering that fatigue failures usually initiate on surfaces, it is accepted that surface roughness has a detrimental effect on the fatigue life of components. Irregularities on the surface cause stress concentrations and form nucleation sites for cracks. As surface conditions are not always satisfactory, particularly for additively manufactured components, it is necessary to develop a reliable model for fatigue life estimation considering surface roughness effects and assure structural integrity. This research study focuses on extending a previously developed subcycle fatigue crack growth model to include the effects of surface roughness. Unlike other models that consider surface irregularities as series of cracks, the proposed model is unique in the way that it treats the peaks and valleys of surface texture as a single equivalent notch. First, an equivalent stress concentration factor for the roughness was estimated and introduced into an asymptotic interpolation method for notches. Later, a concept called equivalent initial flaw size was incorporated along with linear elastic fracture mechanics to predict the fatigue life of Ti-6Al-4V alloy with different levels of roughness under uniaxial and multiaxial loading conditions. The predicted results were validated using the available literature data. The developed model can also handle variable amplitude loading conditions, which is suggested for future work.
ContributorsKethamukkala, Kaushik (Author) / Liu, Yongming (Thesis advisor) / Jiao, Yang (Committee member) / Nian, Qiong (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Dissimilar metal joints such as aluminum-steel joints are extensively used in automobile, naval and aerospace applications and these are subjected to corrosive environmental and mechanical loading resulting in eventual failure of the structural joints. In the case of aluminum alloys under aggressive environment, the damage accumulation is predominantly due to

Dissimilar metal joints such as aluminum-steel joints are extensively used in automobile, naval and aerospace applications and these are subjected to corrosive environmental and mechanical loading resulting in eventual failure of the structural joints. In the case of aluminum alloys under aggressive environment, the damage accumulation is predominantly due to corrosion and is accelerated in presence of other metals. During recent years several approaches have been employed to develop models to assess the metal removal rate in the case of galvanic corrosion. Some of these models are based on empirical methods such as regression analysis while others are based on quantification of the ongoing electrochemical processes. Here, a numerical model for solving the Nernst- Planck equation, which captures the electrochemical process, is implemented to predict the galvanic current distribution and, hence, the corrosion rate of a galvanic couple. An experimentally validated numerical model for an AE44 (Magnesium alloy) and mild steel galvanic couple, available in the literature, is extended to simulate the mechano- electrochemical process in order to study the effect of mechanical loading on the galvanic current density distribution and corrosion rate in AE44-mild steel galvanic couple through a multiphysics field coupling technique in COMSOL Multiphysics®. The model is capable of tracking moving boundariesy of the corroding constituent of the couple by employing Arbitrary Langrangian Eulerian (ALE) method.Results show that, when an anode is under a purely elastic deformation, there is no apparent effect of mechanical loading on the electrochemical galvanic process. However, when the applied tensile load is sufficient to cause a plastic deformation, the local galvanic corrosion activity at the vicinity of the interface is increased remarkably. The effect of other factors, such as electrode area ratios, electrical conductivity of the electrolyte and depth of the electrolyte, are studied. It is observed that the conductivity of the electrolyte significantly influences the surface profile of the anode, especially near the junction. Although variations in electrolyte depth for a given galvanic couple noticeably affect the overall corrosion, the change in the localized corrosion rate at the interface is minimal. Finally, we use the model to predict the current density distribution, rate of corrosion and depth profile of aluminum alloy 7075-stainless steel 316 galvanic joints, which are extensively used in maritime structures.
ContributorsMuthegowda, Nitin Chandra (Author) / Solanki, Kiran N (Thesis advisor) / Rykaczewski, Konrad (Committee member) / Jiao, Yang (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
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Description
Polyurea is a highly versatile material used in coatings and armor systems to protect against extreme conditions such as ballistic impact, cavitation erosion, and blast loading. However, the relationships between microstructurally-dependent deformation mechanisms and the mechanical properties of polyurea are not yet fully understood, especially under extreme conditions. In this

Polyurea is a highly versatile material used in coatings and armor systems to protect against extreme conditions such as ballistic impact, cavitation erosion, and blast loading. However, the relationships between microstructurally-dependent deformation mechanisms and the mechanical properties of polyurea are not yet fully understood, especially under extreme conditions. In this work, multi-scale coarse-grained models are developed to probe molecular dynamics across the wide range of time and length scales that these fundamental deformation mechanisms operate. In the first of these models, a high-resolution coarse-grained model of polyurea is developed, where similar to united-atom models, hydrogen atoms are modeled implicitly. This model was trained using a modified iterative Boltzmann inversion method that dramatically reduces the number of iterations required. Coarse-grained simulations using this model demonstrate that multiblock systems evolve to form a more interconnected hard phase, compared to the more interrupted hard phase composed of distinct ribbon-shaped domains found in diblock systems. Next, a reactive coarse-grained model is developed to simulate the influence of the difference in time scales for step-growth polymerization and phase segregation in polyurea. Analysis of the simulated cured polyurea systems reveals that more rapid reaction rates produce a smaller diameter ligaments in the gyroidal hard phase as well as increased covalent bonding connecting the hard domain ligaments as evidenced by a larger fraction of bridging segments and larger mean radius of gyration of the copolymer chains. The effect that these processing-induced structural variations have on the mechanical properties of the polymer was tested by simulating uniaxial compression, which revealed that the higher degree of hard domain connectivity leads to a 20% increase in the flow stress. A hierarchical multiresolution framework is proposed to fully link coarse-grained molecular simulations across a broader range of time scales, in which a family of coarse-grained models are developed. The models are connected using an incremental reverse–mapping scheme allowing for long time scale dynamics simulated at a highly coarsened resolution to be passed all the way to an atomistic representation.
ContributorsLiu, Minghao (Author) / Oswald, Jay (Thesis advisor) / Muhich, Christopher (Committee member) / Jiang, Hanqing (Committee member) / Peralta, Pedro (Committee member) / Jiao, Yang (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020