Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Engineering Science and Materials Commons™
Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
- Institution
- Keyword
-
- Anelastic phenomena (1)
- Computer software; Humidity – Control; Nevada – Yucca Mountain; Radioactive wastes – Storage; Underground areas – Heating and ventilation – Control ; Temperature control; Ventilation (1)
- Crystals -- Defects -- Mathematical models (1)
- Deformations (Mechanics) (1)
- Dimensional measurements (1)
Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in Engineering Science and Materials
Rectangular Bursting Energy Absorber, John D. Reid, John R. Rohde, Dean L. Sicking
Rectangular Bursting Energy Absorber, John D. Reid, John R. Rohde, Dean L. Sicking
Department of Mechanical and Materials Engineering: Faculty Publications
A bursting energy absorber System having an impact head, and energy absorption mechanism. The energy absorbing mechanism has a generally rectangular mandrel for rupturing cooperating thin-walled generally rectangular tubes in a controlled rupture to absorb impact forces for a colliding vehicle. A frame may be used to mount the System to a truck, trailer, guardrail, median barrier end treatment, or a crash cushion. Stress concetrators such as saw cuts or scoring may be incorporated into the absorption tubes to selectively control rupturing and energy dissipation. The mandrels may be tapered, rectangulary shaped with beveled edges to reduce frictional forces along …
In Situ Corrosion Studies On The Battleship Uss Arizona, John D. Makinson, James D. Carr, Matthew A. Russell, David L. Conlin, Larry E. Murphy
In Situ Corrosion Studies On The Battleship Uss Arizona, John D. Makinson, James D. Carr, Matthew A. Russell, David L. Conlin, Larry E. Murphy
Department of Mechanical and Materials Engineering: Faculty Publications
U.S. National Park Service Submerged Resources Center archaeologists and University of Nebraska-Lincoln metallurgists are assessing hull corrosion by drilling through accumulated concretions and measuring pH and corrosion potentials. Concretion samples are being analyzed to determine the role of microbes in the corrosion process, identify chemical species, and measure electrical and physical properties. The lowest values of pH and E corr occur at the metal/concretion interface. Analysis suggests a variable corrosion rate supported by hydrogen discharge and/or oxygen reduction inside the concretion.
On The Intrinsic Evolution Of Material Inhomogeneities, Marek Elźanowski, Marcelo Epstein
On The Intrinsic Evolution Of Material Inhomogeneities, Marek Elźanowski, Marcelo Epstein
Mathematics and Statistics Faculty Publications and Presentations
The evolution of a distribution of material inhomogeneities (defects, dislo-cations, etc.) is investigated. Adopting our recently developed model of the anelastic evolution law of a defective solid crystal body and using the classical methods of the theory of hyperbolic waves we analyze such phenomena as the long-term relaxation of defects and the dislocation pile-up.
Yucca Mountain Ventilation Studies Support And Associated Code Enhancements, George Danko
Yucca Mountain Ventilation Studies Support And Associated Code Enhancements, George Danko
Publications (YM)
The Task 20 project was prematurely closed by DOE on the basis of becoming critical data to the Yucca Mountain project. Task 20 indeed delivered the first, published hydrothermal-ventilation model, MULTIFLUX V1.0 and V1.1 to BSC during 2001 to support the AMR Rev01 report. The numerical model is designed to predict temperature and humidity distributions in and around the emplacement drifts and on the waste packages stored in a ventilated, high-level nuclear waste repository.
Prediction Of Soakout Time Using Analytical Models, B. Chakravarthy, H. P. Cherukuri, R. G. Wilhelm
Prediction Of Soakout Time Using Analytical Models, B. Chakravarthy, H. P. Cherukuri, R. G. Wilhelm
Department of Mechanical and Materials Engineering: Faculty Publications
In precision manufacturing enterprises, machine parts at nonstandard temperatures are often soaked to standard temperature prior to making any dimensional measurements. The soakout times are usually determined using lumped heat-transfer models where the part temperatures are assumed to be uniform. This article discusses conditions under which lumped model assumptions are valid by comparing lumped analyses for various shapes and materials with the more general finite element results. In addition, the effect of ambient temperature cycling on part response is also studied.