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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

3D short fatigue crack investigation in beta titanium alloys using phase and diffraction contrast tomography / Caractérisation tridimensionnelle des fissures de fatigue courtes dans les alliages de titane métastable (béta) par tomographie en contraste de phase et de diffraction

Herbig, Michael 26 January 2011 (has links)
La tomographie en contraste de diffraction est une nouvelle technique non destructive d'imagerie synchrotron qui caractérise la microstructure et l'orientation des grains dans les matériaux polycristallins en trois dimensions (3D). En la combinant avec la tomographe par contraste de phase. Il est pour la première fois possible d'observer in situ la propagation 3D des fissures de fatigue courtes au sein d'un ensemble de grains entièrement caractérisé (orientation et forme). L'approche combinée, appelée « tomographie tri-dimensionnelle par rayons X des fissures courtes et de la microstructure »(T3DXFM), a été développée sur l’alliage de titane métastable "Beta21S". Une grande partie de ce travail porte sur le développement de la méthodologie T3DXFM. Dans le jeu de données combinées, chaque point de la surface de rupture 3D peut être associé à une structure de données multidimensionnelle contenant des variables décrivant l'orientation des grains, l'orientation locale de la surface de rupture ainsi que l'histoire de la propagation. La méthode utilise un maillage de surface composé de triangles qui décrit la fissure (en d'autres termes: la surface de rupture) dans l'état de propagation mesuré au dernier cycle de fatigue réalisé. Les orientations des grains, les différents fronts de la fissure, les vitesses de croissance locales ainsi que les joints de grains peuvent être visualisés en attribuant des couleurs à ce maillage. Des outils d'extraction des figures de pôle ont été créés et mis en œuvre. Un algorithme a été développé qui est capable de mesurer la vitesse de propagation locale 30 d'une fissure contenant des branchements. / X-Ray Diffraction Contrast Tomography (DCT) is a recently developed, non-destructive synchrotron imaging technique which characterizes microstructure and grain orientation in polycrystalline materials in three dimensions (3D). By combining it with propagation based phase contrast tomography (PCT) it is for the first lime possible to observe in situ the 3D propagation behavior of short fatigue cracks (SFCs) within a set of fully characterized grains (orientation and shape). The combined approach, termed 3D X-ray Tomography of short cracks and Microstructure (3DXTSM), has been developed on the metastable beta titanium alloy "Beta21S". A large part of this work deals with the development of the 3DXTSM methodology. In the combined dataset, each point on the 3D fracture surface can be associated with a multidimensional data structure containing variables describing the grain orientation, the local fracture surface normal and the propagation history. The method uses a surface mesh composed of triangles that describes the crack (in other words: the fracture surface) in the last propagation state measured. Grain orientations, crack fronts, local growth rates and grain boundaries can be visualized by assigning colors to this mesh. The data structure can be interrogated in a number of different ways. Tools for extracting pole figures and pole density distribution functions have been implemented. An algorithm was developed that is capable of measuring the 3D local growth rate of a crack containing branches. The accuracy of the grain boundaries as reconstructed with OCT was evaluated and the elastic constants of Beta21S were determined.
2

Full-field X-ray orientation imaging using convex optimization and a discrete representation of six-dimensional position - orientation space / Imagerie de l'orientation en utilisant les rayons-X et illumination complète, grâce à la minimisation d'un fonctionnelle convexe et à une représentation échantillonné de l'espace sis-dimensionnel position-orientation

Vigano, Nicola Roberto 02 November 2015 (has links)
Cette thèse de doctorat introduit un modèle et un algorithme six-dimensions pour la reconstruction des orientations cristallines locales dans les matériaux polycristallins. Le modèle s’applique actuellement aux données obtenues avec un rayonnement synchrotron (faisceau parallèle et monochromatique), mais il est également possible d’envisager des extensions aux instruments et sources de laboratoire (polychromatique et divergent). Le travail présenté est principalement une extension de la technique connue sous le nom de “Diffraction Contrast Tomography” (DCT) qui permet la reconstruction de la forme et de l’orientation cristalline des grains dans des matériaux polycristallins (avec certaines restrictions concernant la taille et le nombre total de grains ainsi que la mosaicité intragranulaire). / This Ph.D. thesis is about the development and formalization of a six-dimensional tomography method, for the reconstruction of local orientation in poly-crystalline materials. This method is based on a technique known as diffraction contract tomography (DCT), mainly used in synchrotrons, with a monochromatic and parallel high energy X-ray beam. DCT exists since over a decade now, but it was always employed to analyze undeformed or nearly undeformed materials, described by “grains” with a certain average orientation. Because an orientation can be parametrized by the used of only three num- bers, the local orientation in the grains is modelled by a six-dimensional space X6 = R3 ⊗ O3, that is the outer product between a three-dimensional real- space and another three-dimensional orientation-space. This means that for each point of the real-space, there could be a full three-dimensional orientation- space, which however in practice is restricted to a smaller region of interest called “local orientation-space”. The reconstruction problem is then formulated as a global minimisation prob- lem, where the reconstruction of a single grain is the solution that minimizes a functional. There can be different choices for the functionals to use, and they depend on the type of reconstructions one is looking for, and on the type of a priori knowledge is available. All the functionals used include a data fidelity term which ensures that the reconstruction is consistent with the measured diffraction data, and then an additional regularization term is added, like the l1-norm minimization of the solution vector, that tries to limit the number of orientations per real-space voxel, or a Total Variation operator over the sum of the orientation part of the six-dimensional voxels, in order to enforce the homogeneity of the grain volume. When first published, the results on synthetic data from the third chapter high- lighted some key features of the proposed framework, and showed that it was in principle possible to extend DCT to the reconstruction of moderately de- formed materials, but it was unclear whether it could work in practice. The following chapters instead confirm that the proposed framework is viable for reconstructing moderately deformed materials, and that in conjunction with other techniques, it could also overcome the limitations imposed by the grain indexing, and be applied to more challenging textured materials.

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