3 resultados para Aerospace materials

em Deakin Research Online - Australia


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An experimental study on the indentation hardness of NiTi shape memory alloys (SMAs) by using a spherical indenter tip and a finite element investigation to understand the experimental results are presented in this paper. It is shown that the spherical indentation hardness of NiTi SMAs increases with the indentation depth. The finding is contrary to the recent study on the hardness of NiTi SMAs using a sharp Berkovich indenter tip, where the interfacial energy plays a dominant role at small indentation depths. Our numerical investigation indicates that the influence of the interfacial energy is not significant on the spherical indentation hardness of SMAs. Furthermore, the depth dependency of SMA hardness under a spherical indenter is explained by the elastic spherical contact theory incorporating the deformation effect of phase transformation of SMAs. Hertz theory for purely elastic contact shows that the spherical hardness increases with the square root of the indentation depth. The phase transformation beneath the spherical tip weakens the depth effect of a purely elastic spherical hardness. This study enriches our knowledge on the basic concept of hardness for SMAs under spherical indentation at micro- and nanoscales.

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The effect of isothermal ageing on two high temperature, bismaleimide composite materials, a novel CSIRO CBR 320/328 composite and a commercial CIBA GEIGY Matrimid® 5292 composite, was examined at 204 and 250 °C. Delamination is a major cause of failure in composite materials, therefore, the Mode I interlaminar fracture toughness (GIC) of both materials was measured using the double cantilever beam (DCB) test. Chemical degradation of the matrix was monitored concurrently using Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) and Raman spectroscopy. Chemical changes at the core of both of these materials were found to occur concomitantly with the observed changes in interlaminar fracture toughness. FTIR analysis of both matrix materials revealed the predominant degradation mechanism to be the oxidation of the methylene group bridging two aromatic rings common to the structure of both resins, and was substantiated by the ingrowth of a broad peak centred at 1600 cm−1 . In addition to this, the pyromellitic anhydride unit present only in the CBR 320/328 composites was found to be highly resistant to the effects of ageing, whereas the saturated imide, common to the cured structures of both materials, was observed to degrade. Raman spectroscopy indicated that the predominant degradation mechanism of the composites differed at the two ageing temperatures.