Matching Items (54)
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ContributorsBuessing, Robert (Author) / Nian, Qiong (Thesis director) / Zhuang, Houlong (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Program (Contributor)
Created2022-05
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ContributorsBuessing, Robert (Author) / Nian, Qiong (Thesis director) / Zhuang, Houlong (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Program (Contributor)
Created2022-05
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ContributorsBuessing, Robert (Author) / Nian, Qiong (Thesis director) / Zhuang, Houlong (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Program (Contributor)
Created2022-05
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ContributorsBuessing, Robert (Author) / Nian, Qiong (Thesis director) / Zhuang, Houlong (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Program (Contributor)
Created2022-05
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ContributorsBuessing, Robert (Author) / Nian, Qiong (Thesis director) / Zhuang, Houlong (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Program (Contributor)
Created2022-05
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Description
Stiffness and flexibility are essential in many fields, including robotics, aerospace, bioengineering, etc. In recent years, origami-based mechanical metamaterials were designed for better mechanical properties including tunable stiffness and tunable collapsibility. However, in existing studies, the tunable stiffness is only with limited range and limited controllability. To overcome these challenges,

Stiffness and flexibility are essential in many fields, including robotics, aerospace, bioengineering, etc. In recent years, origami-based mechanical metamaterials were designed for better mechanical properties including tunable stiffness and tunable collapsibility. However, in existing studies, the tunable stiffness is only with limited range and limited controllability. To overcome these challenges, two objectives were proposed and achieved in this dissertation: first, to design mechanical metamaterials with metamaterials with selective stiffness and collapsibility; second, to design mechanical metamaterials with in-situ tunable stiffness among positive, zero, and negative.In the first part, triangulated cylinder origami was employed to build deployable mechanical metamaterials through folding and unfolding along the crease lines. These deployable structures are flexible in the deploy direction so that it can be easily collapsed along the same way as it was deployed. An origami-inspired mechanical metamaterial was designed for on-demand deployability and selective collapsibility: autonomous deployability from the collapsed state and selective collapsibility along two different paths, with low stiffness for one path and substantially high stiffness for another path. The created mechanical metamaterial yields unprecedented load bearing capability in the deploy direction while possessing great deployability and collapsibility. The principle in this prospectus can be utilized to design and create versatile origami-inspired mechanical metamaterials that can find many applications. In the second part, curved origami patterns were designed to accomplish in situ stiffness manipulation covering positive, zero, and negative stiffness by activating predefined creases on one curved origami pattern. This elegant design enables in situ stiffness switching in lightweight and space-saving applications, as demonstrated through three robotic-related components. Under a uniform load, the curved origami can provide universal gripping, controlled force transmissibility, and multistage stiffness response. This work illustrates an unexplored and unprecedented capability of curved origami, which opens new applications in robotics for this particular family of origami patterns.
ContributorsZhai, Zirui (Author) / Nian, Qiong (Thesis advisor) / Zhuang, Houlong (Committee member) / Huang, Huei-Ping (Committee member) / Zhang, Wenlong (Committee member) / Liu, Yongming (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
Laser powder bed fusion (LPBF) additive manufacturing (AM) has received widespread attention due to its ability to produce parts with complicated design and better surface finish compared to other additive techniques. LPBF uses a laser heat source to melt layers of powder particles and manufactures a part based on the

Laser powder bed fusion (LPBF) additive manufacturing (AM) has received widespread attention due to its ability to produce parts with complicated design and better surface finish compared to other additive techniques. LPBF uses a laser heat source to melt layers of powder particles and manufactures a part based on the CAD design. This process can benefit significantly through computational modeling. The objective of this thesis was to understand the thermal transport, and fluid flow phenomena of the process, and to optimize the main process parameters such as laser power and scan speed through a combination of computational, experimental, and statistical analysis. A multi-physics model was built using to model temperature profile, bead geometry and elemental evaporation in powder bed process using a non-gaussian interaction between laser heat source and metallic powder. Owing to the scarcity of thermo-physical properties of metallic powders in literature, thermal conductivity, diffusivity, and heat capacity was experimentally tested up to a temperature of 1400 degrees C. The values were used in the computational model, which improved the results significantly. The computational work was also used to assess the impact of fluid flow around melt pool. Dimensional analysis was conducted to determine heat transport mode at various laser power/scan speed combinations. Convective heat flow proved to be the dominant form of heat transfer at higher energy input due to violent flow of the fluid around the molten region, which can also create keyhole effect. The last part of the thesis focused on gaining useful information about several features of the bead area such as contact angle, porosity, voids and melt pool that were obtained using several combinations of laser power and scan speed. These features were quantified using process learning, which was then used to conduct a full factorial design that allows to estimate the effect of the process parameters on the output features. Both single and multi-response analysis are applied to analyze the output response. It was observed that laser power has more influential effect on all the features. Multi response analysis showed 150 W laser power and 200 mm/s produced bead with best possible features.
ContributorsAhsan, Faiyaz (Author) / Ladani, Leila (Thesis advisor) / Razmi, Jafar (Committee member) / Kwon, Beomjin (Committee member) / Nian, Qiong (Committee member) / Zhuang, Houlong (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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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
High-temperature mechanical behaviors of metal alloys and underlying microstructural variations responsible for such behaviors are essential areas of interest for many industries, particularly for applications such as jet engines. Anisotropic grain structures, change of preferred grain orientation, and other transformations of grains occur both during metal powder bed fusion additive

High-temperature mechanical behaviors of metal alloys and underlying microstructural variations responsible for such behaviors are essential areas of interest for many industries, particularly for applications such as jet engines. Anisotropic grain structures, change of preferred grain orientation, and other transformations of grains occur both during metal powder bed fusion additive manufacturing processes, due to variation of thermal gradient and cooling rates, and afterward during different thermomechanical loads, which parts experience in their specific applications, could also impact its mechanical properties both at room and high temperatures. In this study, an in-depth analysis of how different microstructural features, such as crystallographic texture, grain size, grain boundary misorientation angles, and inherent defects, as byproducts of electron beam powder bed fusion (EB-PBF) AM process, impact its anisotropic mechanical behaviors and softening behaviors due to interacting mechanisms. Mechanical testing is conducted for EB-PBF Ti6Al4V parts made at different build orientations up to 600°C temperature. Microstructural analysis using electron backscattered diffraction (EBSD) is conducted on samples before and after mechanical testing to understand the interacting impact that temperature and mechanical load have on the activation of certain mechanisms. The vertical samples showed larger grain sizes, with an average of 6.6 µm, a lower average misorientation angle, and subsequently lower strength values than the other two horizontal samples. Among the three strong preferred grain orientations of the α phases, <1 1 2 ̅ 1> and <1 1 2 ̅ 0> were dominant in horizontally built samples, whereas the <0 0 0 1> was dominant in vertically built samples. Thus, strong microstructural variation, as observed among different EB-PBF Ti6Al4V samples, mainly resulted in anisotropic behaviors. Furthermore, alpha grain showed a significant increase in average grain size for all samples with the increasing test temperature, especially from 400°C to 600°C, indicating grain growth and coarsening as potential softening mechanisms along with temperature-induced possible dislocation motion. The severity of internal and external defects on fatigue strength has been evaluated non-destructively using quantitative methods, i.e., Murakami’s square root of area parameter model and Basquin’s model, and the external surface defects were rendered to be more critical as potential crack initiation sites.
ContributorsMian, Md Jamal (Author) / Ladani, Leila (Thesis advisor) / Razmi, Jafar (Committee member) / Shuaib, Abdelrahman (Committee member) / Mobasher, Barzin (Committee member) / Nian, Qiong (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
The purpose of this study was to comprehend the global warming potential (GWP), cost variability, and competitiveness of steel with rising carbon taxes. Aluminum, glass fiber composite, and carbon fiber composite were chosen as competing materials. In order to compare the aforementioned factors, the GWP of several processes to produce

The purpose of this study was to comprehend the global warming potential (GWP), cost variability, and competitiveness of steel with rising carbon taxes. Aluminum, glass fiber composite, and carbon fiber composite were chosen as competing materials. In order to compare the aforementioned factors, the GWP of several processes to produce steel, aluminum, and fiber composites was examined. Cost analyses of various methods were also carried out to determine their viability. Energy consumption data for each of the paths under consideration were taken from the literature for the study. To get the consistent GWP for traditional and decarbonized scenarios, the required energy is multiplied with corresponding energy source (natural gas or electricity). Even after accounting for the carbon tax and the weight-reduction factor, the results show that steel still has the lowest production costs, followed by aluminum, while fiber composites remain the most costly. EAF- steel and secondary aluminum has least GWP followed by H2-DRI (Hydrogen- Direct Reduced Iron)steel and NG-DRI (Natural Gas- Direct Reduced Iron) steel with carbon capture and storage (CCS). The state of art technology for glass fiber reinforced composite also emits less carbon dioxide but the cost of production is still high. Carbon fiber reinforced composite emits most carbon dioxide and is least economical.
ContributorsRajulwar, Vaishnavi Vijay (Author) / Seetharaman, Sridhar (Thesis advisor) / Emady, Heather (Committee member) / Nian, Qiong (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023