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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Fringe effect of electrical capacitance and resistance tomography sensors and its application in 3D imaging

Sun, Jiangtao January 2014 (has links)
This PhD work is dedicated to investigating the fringe effect of electrical capacitance tomography (ECT) and electrical resistance tomography (ERT) sensors systematically, exploring possible solutions and developing a novel 3D imaging technique by utilising the fringe effect of electrical tomography (ET) sensors. By referring to 2D simulation results, the fringe effect is investigated for 3D ERT and ECT sensor models with or without grounded guards, and with different axial lengths of electrodes. Simulation results reveal that increasing the electrode length or adopting grounded guards can reduce the fringe effect of ECT and ERT sensors. In this work, a voltage-excitation strategy is proposed and validated for ERT sensors instead of the conventional current-injection strategy. This approach enables ECT and ERT sensors to be integrated together as a common one to simplify the sensor design and reduce the interference between the ECT and ERT dual-modality measurements. For a conventional ERT sensor with the adjacent strategy, the fringe effect is evaluated for axially non-uniform central core and off-central core distributions at different axial positions and with different axial dimensions and conductivity contrasts. A method is proposed for compensating the fringe effect with the above typical distributions and a two-object distribution. A three-plane ERT sensor scheme is suggested for reducing the fringe effect induced by objects outside the sensor plane and the over-estimation by Landweber iteration. Both simulation and experiment have proved the effectiveness of the three-plane sensor scheme and the compensation method. Using the fringe effect, a novel 3D imaging method is proposed for ET with a single-plane sensor. It is explored to image metallic objects with ECT. The axial position of the object is derived by examining the corresponding fringe effect in a single-plane ECT sensor. Along with 2D imaging of the cross-sectional distribution, 3D imaging is achieved for a cylindrical metallic rod with known size. With this method, only the 3D position of the object needs to be calculated during the reconstruction which reduces the number of unknowns greatly and can improve the accuracy and stability of reconstruction.
2

Nanocomposites et mousses à base de nanofibrilles de cellulose : rhéologie au cours de leur mise en forme et propriétés mécaniques / Nanocomposites and foams from cellulose nanofibrils : rheology during their processing and mechanical properties

Martoïa, Florian 30 November 2015 (has links)
Ce travail porte sur l'incorporation de nanorenforts biosourcés, c'est-à-dire des nanofibrilles de cellulose (NFC), dans les matériaux composites à matrice polymère et les mousses. Ces nouveaux matériaux biosourcés peuvent par exemple être utilisés pour la conception de structures sandwich. L'étude à caractère expérimental, théorique et numérique s'articule autour de trois axes visant à optimiser tant les procédés d'élaboration que les propriétés en service de ces matériaux.Dans un premier temps, la rhéologie des suspensions concentrées de NFC, fluides à seuil thixotropes, a été étudiée aux échelles macro- et mésoscopiques en utilisant un dispositif original de rhéométrie couplé à des mesures de champs cinématiques par vélocimétrie ultra-sonore. Nous montrons ainsi que l'écoulement des suspensions de NFC est fortement hétéro-gène et présente des glissements aux parois, de multiples bandes de cisaillement couplés avec des écoulements de type « bouchon ». Sur la base de cette étude, un modèle rhéolo-gique multi-échelles est proposé. Ce modèle tient compte d'une part de l'architecture aniso-trope des réseaux connectés de NFC dans ces suspensions, et d'autre part des interactions mécaniques et physico-chimiques aux échelles nanométriques. Il permet de montrer que les interactions colloïdales et hydrodynamiques, ainsi que la tortuosité et l'orientation des NFC jouent un rôle majeur sur la contrainte seuil et sur le comportement rhéofluidifiant de ces suspensions.Dans un deuxième temps, des nanocomposites à matrice polymère ont été élaborés sous forme de films en faisant varier sur une très grande plage la fraction volumique de NFC. En utilisant d'une part des techniques de microscopie (AFM, MEB) et de diffraction aux rayons X, et d'autre part des essais mécaniques (traction, DMA) nous montrons (i) que les NFC ont une orientation plane et s'organisent en réseaux connectés par des liaisons hydro-gènes, (ii) que ces réseaux jouent un rôle majeur sur le comportement mécanique des nano-composites et (iii) que le comportement élastique des nanocomposites est bien en deçà des prévisions données par les modèles micromécaniques de la littérature. De là, nous proposons un modèle multi-échelles alternatif où les principaux nano-mécanismes de déformation sont ceux se produisant dans les parties amorphes des NFC et au niveau des très nombreuses interfaces entre NFC.Enfin, nous avons étudié l'influence des conditions d'élaboration, de la nature et de la con-centration des NFC sur les microstructures (microtomographie synchrotron à rayons X), les propriétés mécaniques (essais de compression) et les micro-mécanismes de déformation (essai in situ en microtomographie) de mousses préparées par cryodessiccation de suspensions aqueuses de NFC. / This study focuses on the use of cellulose nanofibrils (NFCs) as bio-based nano-reinforcement in polymer composites and foams. These renewable materials can be used in place of traditional materials such as for instance to produce sandwich panels. This experi-mental, theoretical and numerical work aims at optimizing the processing of these NFC-based materials as well as their use properties.In the first part of this work, the rheology of concentrated NFC suspensions, that behave as thixotropic yield stress fluids, is investigated at macro- and mesoscales using an original rheo-ultrasonic velocimetry (rheo-USV) setup allowing the local flow kinematic to be obtai-ned. We show that the flow of NFC suspensions is highly heterogeneous and exhibits com-plex situations with the coexistence of wall slippage, multiple shear bands and plug-like flow bands. Using this experimental database, we develop an original multiscale rheological model for the prediction of the rheology of NFC suspensions. The model takes into account the anisotropic fibrous nature of NFC networks as well as colloidal and mechanical interaction forces occurring at the nanoscale. The model predictions prove that colloidal and hydrody-namic interaction forces together with the orientation and the wavy nature of NFCs play a major role on the yield stress and shear thinning behaviour of the suspensions.In the second part of this work, NFC-reinforced polymer nanocomposite films are processed for a wide range of NFC contents. Using advanced microscopy techniques (AFM, SEM), X-ray diffraction and mechanical tests (tensile and DMA tests), we show (i) that NFCs form highly connected nanofibrous structures with in-plane random orientation, (ii) that these connected NFC networks play a leading role on the mechanical behaviour of the nanocompo-sites and (iii) that the elastic properties of nanocomposite films are much lower than those predicted from the micromechanical models of the literature. In light of these observations, we propose an alternative multiscale model in which the main involved deformation nano-mechanisms are those occurring both in the amorphous segments of the nanofibers and in the numerous nanofiber-nanofiber contact zones.Finally, in a third part we focus on the influence of the processing conditions, the suspension type and the NFC concentration on the microstructure (using X-ray synchrotron microto-mography), the mechanical properties (using compression tests) and the deformation micro-mechanisms (using in situ compression test with X-ray microtomography) of various foams prepared from NFC suspensions by freeze-drying.

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