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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
Nanostructured zeolites, in particular nanocrystalline zeolites, are of great interest due to their efficient use in conventional catalysis, separations, and emerging applications. Despite the recent advances, fewer than 20 zeolite framework types have been synthesized in the form of nanocrystallites and their scalable synthesis has yet to be developed

Nanostructured zeolites, in particular nanocrystalline zeolites, are of great interest due to their efficient use in conventional catalysis, separations, and emerging applications. Despite the recent advances, fewer than 20 zeolite framework types have been synthesized in the form of nanocrystallites and their scalable synthesis has yet to be developed and understood. Geopolymers, claimed to be “amorphous cousins of zeolites”, are a class of ceramic-like aluminosilicate materials with prominent application in construction due to their unique chemical and mechanical properties. Despite the monolith form, geopolymers are fundamentally nanostructured materials and contain zeolite nanocrystallites.

Herein, a new cost-effective and scalable synthesis of various types of nanocrystalline zeolites based on geopolymer chemistry is presented. The study includes the synthesis of highly crystalline discrete nanorods of a CAN zeolite framework structure that had not been achieved hitherto, the exploration of the Na−Al−Si−H2O kinetic phase diagram of hydrogels that gives SOD, CAN and FAU nanocrystalline zeolites, and the discovery of a unique formation mechanism of highly crystalline nanostructured FAU zeolite with intermediate gel products that possess an unprecedented uniform distribution of elements. This study demonstrated the possibility of using high-concentration hydrogels for the synthesis of nanocrystalline zeolites of additional framework structures.

Moreover, a comprehensive study on nanostructured FAU zeolites ion-exchanged with Ag+, Zn2+, Cu2+ and Fe2+ for antibacterial applications is presented, which comprises metal ion release kinetics, antibacterial properties, and cytotoxicity. For the first time, superior metal ion release performance was confirmed for the nanostructured zeolites compared to their micron-sized counterparts. The metal ion-exchanged FAU nanostructured zeolites were established as new effective antibacterial materials featuring their unique physiochemical, antibacterial, and cytotoxic properties.
ContributorsChen, Shaojiang (Author) / Seo, Dong Kyun (Thesis advisor) / Trovitch, Ryan (Committee member) / Thomas, MaryLaura Lind (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019