材料科学
粘弹性
复合材料
压缩(物理)
超声波传感器
刚度
放松(心理学)
模数
可塑性
应变率
变形(气象学)
下降(电信)
应力松弛
动态模量
动态力学分析
跌落冲击
声学
聚合物
蠕动
润湿
物理
社会心理学
电信
计算机科学
心理学
作者
Ari Salmi,Lauri Salminen,Birgitta A. Engberg,Tomas Björkqvist,Edward Hæggström
摘要
The relationship between the impactor velocity and the amount of strain localization in a single impact compression of cellular solids is known. However, few studies report on the effects of repeated high frequency compression. We therefore studied the mechanical behavior of Norway spruce, a cellular viscoelastic material, before, during, and after cyclic high frequency, high strain rate, compression. A custom made device applied 5000-20 000 unipolar (constrained compression and free relaxation) fatigue cycles with a 0.75 mm peak-to-peak amplitude at 500 Hz frequency. The consequences of this treatment were quantified by pitch-catch ultrasonic measurements and by dynamic material testing using an encapsulated Split-Hopkinson device that incorporated a high-speed camera. The ultrasonic measurements quantified a stiffness modulus drop and revealed the presence of a fatigued low modulus layer near the impacting surface. Such a localized plastic deformation is not predicted by classical mechanics. We introduce a simple model that explains several changes in the mechanical properties caused by fatiguing. The high speed images indicated pronounced strain localization in the weakest (thinnest walls) parts of the earlywood layers, and revealed strain propagation as a function of time. We present a hypothesis explaining why there is a fatigued layer formed in a piece of wood that has sustained cyclic compression and free relaxation.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI