Matching Items (129)
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Description
This thesis investigates an interpenetrating network of polyacrylamide and poly acrylic acid for use in a dynamic tactile display, which presents traditionally two-dimensional electronic screens as three-dimensional topographical models that can be experienced through touch. This kind of display would allow for greater access to traditionally visual information for the

This thesis investigates an interpenetrating network of polyacrylamide and poly acrylic acid for use in a dynamic tactile display, which presents traditionally two-dimensional electronic screens as three-dimensional topographical models that can be experienced through touch. This kind of display would allow for greater access to traditionally visual information for the visually impaired. This hydrogel demonstrates Upper Critical Solution Temperature (UCST) near room temperature which facilitates a swelling transition, characterized by a sharp increase in swelling as this temperature is surpassed. Through the utilization of light responsive additives, light can trigger this shift, as the additives harness visible light, convert it into heat to raise the gel’s temperature, and increase the volume of the gel. Light-responsive additives explored include chlorophyllin, gold nanoparticles, and carbon black. Each of these additives required unique synthesis planning and strategies in order to optimize the performance of the gels. Synthesized gels were characterized using thermal swelling tests, light response tests and compression tests to determine the material strength. The best performing additive was chlorophyllin and allowed for a 20.8%±4.5% percent weight increase upon exposure to light for 10 minutes. In addition to investigating light-responsive additives, modifications were pursued to alter the overall UCST behavior, such as the addition of sodium chloride. By adding sodium chloride into the hydrogel, the gel was found to have a wider transition. Overall, light-responsive behavior was developed, and further work can be done in improving the response time and degree of swelling in order to make this material more viable for use in a dynamic tactile display.
ContributorsSitterle, Philip Kerry (Author) / Dai, Lenore (Thesis director) / Xu, Yifei (Committee member) / School of Music (Contributor) / Chemical Engineering Program (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2018-12
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Description
Statistical process control (SPC) is an important quality application that is used throughout industry and is composed of control charts. Most often, it is applied in the final stages of product manufacturing. However it would be beneficial to apply SPC throughout all stages of the manufacturing process such as the

Statistical process control (SPC) is an important quality application that is used throughout industry and is composed of control charts. Most often, it is applied in the final stages of product manufacturing. However it would be beneficial to apply SPC throughout all stages of the manufacturing process such as the beginning stages. This report explores the fundamentals of SPC, applicable programs, important aspects of implementation, and specific examples of where SPC was beneficial. Important programs for SPC are general statistical software such as JMP and Minitab, and some programs are made specifically for SPC such as SPACE: statistical process and control environment. Advanced programs like SPACE are beneficial because they can easily assist with creating control charts and setting up rules, alarms and notifications, and reaction mechanisms. After the charts are set up it is important to apply rules to the charts to see when a system is running off target which indicates the need to troubleshoot and investigate. This makes the notification part an integral aspect as well because attention and awareness must be brought to out of control situations. The next important aspect is ensuring there is a reaction mechanism or plan on what to do in the event of an out of control situation and what to do to get the system running back on target. Setting up an SPC system takes time and practice and requires a lot of collaboration with experts who know more about the system or the quality side. Some of the more difficult parts of implementation is getting everyone on board and creating trainings and getting the appropriate personnel trained.
ContributorsSennavongsa, Christy (Author) / Raupp, Gregory (Thesis director) / Dai, Lenore (Committee member) / Materials Science and Engineering Program (Contributor) / Chemical Engineering Program (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2016-12
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Description
The purpose of this project is to investigate the swelling ratio exhibited due to photothermal effects of double network polyacrylamide poly(acrylic acid) hydrogels synthesized with carbon black as a light-sensitive chromophore. Optimal carbon black dispersion was achieved in solutions through sonication, using V9A32 carbon black, where dynamic light scattering recorded

The purpose of this project is to investigate the swelling ratio exhibited due to photothermal effects of double network polyacrylamide poly(acrylic acid) hydrogels synthesized with carbon black as a light-sensitive chromophore. Optimal carbon black dispersion was achieved in solutions through sonication, using V9A32 carbon black, where dynamic light scattering recorded particle diameters in the range of 195.0-375.8 nanometers for water/carbon black mixtures, 242.4-262.6 nanometers for monomer/carbon black mixtures without initiator, and 1109.3-1783.9 nanometers for monomer/carbon black mixtures including initiator. The double network polyacrylamide poly(acrylic acid) hydrogels with carbon black yielded weight increases of 0.126% and 6.043%, respectively, after 2 minutes and 10 minutes of being exposed to a light stimulus; compared to previous work which showed a double network polyacrylamide poly(acrylic acid) hydrogel with chlorophyllin yielded weight increases of 18.3% and 20.8%, respectively, after 2 minutes and 10 minutes of being exposed to a light stimulus, the carbon black resulted in a less robust response. Future work for application of the light-responsive hydrogels includes the development of a screen covering that will be made of the hydrogels. This covering is intended for use on LED screen displays, where a light change will result in a protrusion from the screen. The purpose behind this application is that technology users who are visually impaired can still determine what their LED device is trying to communicate with them.
ContributorsReimann, Morgan Elizabeth (Co-author) / Yifei, Xu (Co-author) / Dai, Lenore (Co-author, Thesis director) / Xu, Yifei (Committee member) / Chemical Engineering Program (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2017-05
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Description
The goal of this research is to compare the mechanical properties of CP-Ti and Ti-O and to understand the relationship between a material's microstructure and its response to fatigue. Titanium has been selected due to its desirable properties and applicability in several engineering fields. Both samples are polished and etched

The goal of this research is to compare the mechanical properties of CP-Ti and Ti-O and to understand the relationship between a material's microstructure and its response to fatigue. Titanium has been selected due to its desirable properties and applicability in several engineering fields. Both samples are polished and etched in order to visualize and characterize the microstructure and its features. The samples then undergo strain-controlled fatigue tests for several thousand cycles. Throughout testing, images of the samples are taken at zero and maximum load for DIC analysis. The DIC results can be used to study the local strains of the samples. The DIC analysis performed on the CP-Ti sample and presented in this study will be used to understand how the addition of oxygen in the Ti-O impacts fatigue response. The outcome of this research can be used to develop long-lasting, high strength materials.
ContributorsRiley, Erin Ashland (Author) / Solanki, Kiran (Thesis director) / Oswald, Jay (Committee member) / School of Art (Contributor) / Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Program (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2016-05
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Description
The ability to sense applied damage and correlate it with a measurable signal is extremely desirable in any material application to prevent catastrophic failure and the possible loss of use of the material or human injury. Mechanochemistry, in which mechanical forces induce chemical changes, can allow for targeted damage detection

The ability to sense applied damage and correlate it with a measurable signal is extremely desirable in any material application to prevent catastrophic failure and the possible loss of use of the material or human injury. Mechanochemistry, in which mechanical forces induce chemical changes, can allow for targeted damage detection by way of embedded mechanophore units, with certain mechanophore chemistries emitting a fluorescent signal in response an applied force. In this work, we successfully employed microparticles of the mechanophore dimeric 9-anthracene carboxylic acid (Di-AC) in a thermoset polyurethane matrix to study their application as universal stress-sensing fillers in network polymer matrix composites. Under a compressive force, there is bond breakage in the mechanically weak cyclooctane photodimers of Di-AC, such that there is reversion to the fluorescent anthracene-type monomers. This fluorescent emission was then correlated to the applied strain, and the precursors to damage were detected with a noticeable fluorescent signal change at an applied strain of only 2%. This early damage detection was additionally possible at very low particle loadings of 2.5 and 5 wt%, with the 5 wt% loading showing enhanced material properties compared to the 2.5 wt%, due to particle reinforcement in the composite. Overall, the synthesis of Di-AC as a stress-sensitive particle filler allows for facile addition of advanced functionality to these ubiquitous thermoset composites.
ContributorsDasgupta, Avi Ryan (Author) / Dai, Lenore (Thesis director) / Nofen, Elizabeth (Committee member) / Chemical Engineering Program (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2016-05
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Description
This thesis document outlines the construction of a device for preparation of cylindrical ice-aluminum specimens. These specimens are for testing in a uniaxial load cell with the goal of determining properties of the ice-metal interface, as part of research into spray ice material properties and how such ice might be

This thesis document outlines the construction of a device for preparation of cylindrical ice-aluminum specimens. These specimens are for testing in a uniaxial load cell with the goal of determining properties of the ice-metal interface, as part of research into spray ice material properties and how such ice might be better removed from maritime vessels operating in sub-freezing temperatures. The design of the sample preparation device is outlined, justifications for design and component choices given and discussion of the design process and how problems which arose were tackled are included. Water is piped into the device through the freezers lid and sprayed by a full cone misting nozzle onto an aluminum sample rod. The sample rod is supported with Ultra High Molecular Weight Polyethylene pillars which allow for free rotation. A motor, timing belt and pulley assembly is used to rotate this metal rod at 1.25 RPM. The final device produces samples though intermittent flow in a 5 minutes on, 20 minutes off cycle. This intermittent flow is controlled through the use of a solenoid valve which is wired into the compressor. When the thermostat detects that the freezer is too warm, the compressor kicks on and the flow of water is stopped. Additional modifications to the freezer unit include the addition of a fan to cool the compressor during device operation. Recommendations are provided towards the end of the thesis, including suggestions to change the device to allow for constant flow and that deionized water be used instead of tap water due to hard water concerns.
ContributorsBaker, Dylan Paul (Author) / Oswald, Jay (Thesis director) / Yekani Fard, Masoud (Committee member) / Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Program (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2016-12
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Description
An approach for modeling resistance spot welding of thin-gauge, dissimilar metal sheets with high electrical conductivity is presented in this work. In this scenario, the electrical and thermal contact resistances play a dominant role in heat generation and temperature evolution within the workpieces; these interactions ultimately control the weld geometry.

An approach for modeling resistance spot welding of thin-gauge, dissimilar metal sheets with high electrical conductivity is presented in this work. In this scenario, the electrical and thermal contact resistances play a dominant role in heat generation and temperature evolution within the workpieces; these interactions ultimately control the weld geometry. Existing models are limited in modeling these interactions, especially for dissimilar and thin-gauge metal sheets, and at higher temperatures when the multiphysics becomes increasingly interdependent. The approach presented here uses resistivity measurements, combined with thermal modeling and known bulk resistance relationships to infer the relationship between electrical contact resistance and temperature for each of the different material interfaces in the welding process. Corresponding thermal contact resistance models are developed using the Wiedemann-Franz law combined with a scaling factor to account for nonmetallic behavior. Experimental and simulation voltage histories and final weld diameter were used to validate this model for a Cu/Al/Cu and a Cu/Al/Cu/Al/Cu stack-ups. This model was then used to study the effect of Ni-P coating on resistance spot welding of Cu and Al sheets in terms of weld formation, mechanical deformation, and contact resistance. Contact resistance and current density distribution are highly dependent on contact pressure and temperature distribution at the Cu/Al interface in the presence of alumina. The Ni-P coating helps evolve a partially-bonded donut shaped weld into a fully-bonded hourglass-shaped weld by decreasing the dependence of contact resistance and current density distribution on contact pressure and temperature distribution at the Cu/Al interface. This work also provides an approach to minimize distortion due to offset-rolling in thin aluminum sheets by optimizing the stiffening feature geometry. The distortion is minimized using particle swarm optimization. The objective function is a function of distortion and smallest radius of curvature in the geometry. Doubling the minimum allowable radius of curvature nearly doubles the reduction in distortion from the stadium shape for a quarter model. Reduction in distortion in the quarter model extends to the full-scale model with the best design performing 5.3% and 27% better than the corresponding nominal design for a quarter and full-scale model, respectively.
ContributorsVeeresh, Pawan (Author) / Oswald, Jay (Thesis advisor) / Carlson, Blair (Committee member) / Hoover, Christian (Committee member) / Rajagopalan, Jagannathan (Committee member) / Solanki, Kiran (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
This work systematically investigates structure-stability relations in various polymer derived ceramic (PDC) systems and metal organic frameworks (MOFs), both of which are hybrid materials. The investigation of silicon carbides (SiC) confirms thermodynamic stabilization of PDCs with increasing mixed bonding (Si bonded to both C, O and/or N). The study of

This work systematically investigates structure-stability relations in various polymer derived ceramic (PDC) systems and metal organic frameworks (MOFs), both of which are hybrid materials. The investigation of silicon carbides (SiC) confirms thermodynamic stabilization of PDCs with increasing mixed bonding (Si bonded to both C, O and/or N). The study of more complex silicon oxycarbide (SiOC) structures shows stabilization of SiOCs with increasing pyrolysis temperature (between 1200 and1500 oC), and points to dissimilarities in the stabilizing effect of different mixed bonding environments (SiO3C, SiO2C2, or SiOC3) and their relative amounts. Analyses of quaternary silicon oxycarbonitride (SiC(N)(O)) materials suggests increased stabilization with increasing N content, and superior stabilization due to SiNxC4-x compared to SiOxC4-x mixed bonds. Investigation of the energetics of metal filler (Nb, Hf, Ta) incorporation in SiOCs shows that choice of metal filler influences the composition, structural evolution, and thermodynamic stability in PDCs. Ta fillers can stabilize otherwise unstable SiO3C mixed bonds. Independent of metal incorporation or lack thereof, in SiOC systems, higher pyrolysis temperature (1200-1500 oC) forms more stable ceramics. The stabilizing effect of order/disorder of the free carbon phase is system-dependent. The work on (MOFs) highlights stabilization trends obtained from the investigation of zeolitic imidazolate frameworks (ZIFs) and boron imidazolate frameworks (BIFs) based on azolate linkers. Study of the energetics of metal (Co(II), Cu (II), and Zn (II) ) substitution in isostructural ZIFs shows that in MOFs the stabilizing effect of metal is dependent on both framework topology (diamondoid (dia) > sodalite (SOD)) and dimensionality (2D > 3D). Thermodynamic analyses of metal substitution (Ag(I), Cu(I), and Li (I)) in isostructural ii SOD and dia BIF systems confirm increase in density as a general descriptor for increased stabilization in MOFs. The study of energetics of guest-host interactions during CO2 incorporation in azolate frameworks (i.e., ZIF-8) shows strong dependence of energetics of adsorption on choice of linker and metal. Additionally, several energetically favorable reaction pathways for the formation of CO3-ZIF-8 have been identified. Both PDCs and MOFs show a complex energetic landscape, with identifiable system dependent and general structural descriptors for increased thermodynamic stabilization and tunability of the energetics of guest-host interactions.
ContributorsLeonel, Gerson J (Author) / Navrotsky, Alexandra (Thesis advisor) / Dai, Lenore (Committee member) / Thomas, Mary (Committee member) / Singh, Gurpreet (Committee member) / Friščić, Tomislav (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
This thesis presents a study of Boron Nitride (BN) and Copper (Cu)/BN multilayer thin films in terms of synthesis, chemical, structural, morphological, and mechanical properties characterization. In this study, the influence of Ar/N₂ flow rate in synthesizing stoichiometric BN thin films via magnetron sputtering was investigated initially. Post magnetron

This thesis presents a study of Boron Nitride (BN) and Copper (Cu)/BN multilayer thin films in terms of synthesis, chemical, structural, morphological, and mechanical properties characterization. In this study, the influence of Ar/N₂ flow rate in synthesizing stoichiometric BN thin films via magnetron sputtering was investigated initially. Post magnetron sputtering, the crystalline nature and B:N stoichiometric ratio of deposited thin films were investigated by X-ray diffraction (XRD) and X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (XPS) respectively. Thicknesses revealed by ellipsometry analysis for nearly stoichiometric B:N thin films and their corresponding deposition times were used for estimating BN interlayer deposition times during the deposition of Cu/BN multilayer thin films. To characterize the microstructure of the synthesized Cu/BN multilayer thin films, XRD and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) have been used. Finally, a comparison of nanoindentation measurements on pure Cu and Cu/BN multilayer thin films having different number of BN interlayers were used for studying the influence of BN interlayers on improving mechanical properties such as hardness and elastic modulus. The results show that the stoichiometry of BN thin films is dependent on the Ar/N₂ flow rate during magnetron sputtering. An optimal Ar/N₂ flow rate of 13:5 during deposition was required to achieve an approximately 1:1 B:N stoichiometry. Grazing incidence and powder XRD analysis on these stoichiometric BN thin films deposited at room temperature did not reveal a phase match when compared to hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) and cubic boron nitride (c-BN) reference XRD patterns. For a BN thin film deposition time of 5 hours, a thickness of approximately 40 nm was achieved, as revealed by ellipsometry. XRD and microstructure analysis using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) on pure Cu and Cu/BN thin films showed that the Cu grain size in Cu/BN thin films is much finer than pure Cu thin films. Interestingly, nanoindentation measurements on pure Cu and Cu/BN thin films having a similar overall thickness demonstrated that hardness and Young’s modulus of the films were improved significantly when BN interlayers are present.
ContributorsCaner, Sumeyye (Author) / Rajagopalan, Jagannathan (Thesis advisor) / Oswald, Jay (Committee member) / Solanki, Kiran (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Plastics, when released into the environment, undergo surface weathering due to mechanical abrasion and ultraviolet (UV) exposure that leads to the formation of microplastics. Weathering also introduces oxygen functional groups on the surface, which will affect surface interactions compared to pristine plastics. In this study, the adsorption of selected model

Plastics, when released into the environment, undergo surface weathering due to mechanical abrasion and ultraviolet (UV) exposure that leads to the formation of microplastics. Weathering also introduces oxygen functional groups on the surface, which will affect surface interactions compared to pristine plastics. In this study, the adsorption of selected model contaminants of high environmental relevance was evaluated at different level of abiotic and biotic transformation to understand how microplastics aging influences contaminant adsorption on high density polyethylene (HDPE) and polypropylene (PPE). Microplastics were aged through an accelerated weathering process using UV exposure with or without hydrogen peroxide. The effect of UV aging on the microplastics’ morphology and surface chemistry was characterized by Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy, X-Ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy, streaming Zeta potential, Brunauer–Emmett–Teller Krypton adsorption analyses and Computed X-Ray Tomography. Sorption of organic contaminants was found to be higher on aged microplastics compared to pristine ones for all contaminants investigated. This increase in sorption affinity was found to be associated with a change in the surface chemistry and not in an increase in specific surface area after aging. Biological surface weathering (i.e., biofilm formation) was carried out at a lab-scale setting using model biofilm-forming bacteria followed by adsorption affinity measurement of biofilm-laden microplastics with the model organic contaminants. The amount of microbial biomass accumulated on the surface was also evaluated to correlate the changes in sorption affinity with the change in microplastic biofilm formation. The results of this study emphasize the need to understand how contaminant-microplastics interactions will evolve as microplastics are altered by biotic and abiotic factors in the environment.
ContributorsBhagat, Kartik (Author) / Perreault, Francois (Thesis advisor) / Westerhoff, Paul (Committee member) / Oswald, Jay (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022