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Experimental Investigation of Shear Thickening Fluid Impregnated Flax Fabric and Flax/Kevlar Hybrid FabricsFehrenbach, Joseph Brian January 2020 (has links)
Shear thickening fluids have the potential to improve the effectiveness of fabric materials in body armor applications as they have shown to increase the puncture and ballistic resistance of Kevlar fabrics. However, the effect of using STFs with natural fabrics such as flax has never been studied. The rheology of STFs at varying concentrations of nanosilica dispersed in polyethylene glycol PEG was studied at different temperatures and it was found that the STFs behave as a non-Newtonian fluid in response to changes in shear rate. In this study the effectiveness on the puncture and ballistic resistance of impregnating flax fabric with STF of nanosilica in PEG were investigated. The effect of hybridization of flax and Kevlar was also investigated. The puncture and ballistic resistance of the samples treated with STFs was found to increase significantly and can be controlled by STF concentration.
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Development of a non-Newtonian latching deviceAnderson, Brian January 1900 (has links)
Master of Science / Department of Mechanical and Nuclear Engineering / B. Terry Beck / The objective of this project was to first evaluate the feasibility of developing a viscous damping device that used a Non-Newtonian Shear Thickening Fluid (STF) and incorporating it as a door latch into an existing commercial dryer unit. The device would keep the door closed during sudden large magnitude impact loads while still allowing the door to open normally when force is applied gradually at the door handle.
The first phase of the project involved performing background research on the subject and performing preliminary analysis in order to determine if the concept was feasible enough to be worth constructing a physical prototype. This preliminary analysis consisted of a literature review of existing damping mechanisms and shear thickening fluids, rheometer testing of shear thickening suspensions to obtain viscosity data, and performing numerical simulations to determine if a damper that fit the size requirements could produce enough resistance force.
The focus for the second phase of the project was to demonstrate a proof of concept in the form of a working model prototype. This prototype did not need be of identical shape and proportions as the finalized design, but would be developed to facilitate experimental testing and evaluation of performance under the desired operating conditions. It was also necessary to design and construct the test setup for the dynamic testing of the dryer door opening so that the opening displacement as well as the force applied to the door could be recorded as a function of time.
The final phase of the project consisted of improving upon the original prototype in order to prove the validity of a viscous latch beyond the proof of concept phase in a form closer to what is desired for the commercial product. This required reducing the physical size of the new prototype latch so as to fit within the space available in a particular dryer, incorporate a one-way ratcheting device into the latch to allow unrestricted closing of the door, and increase the operational temperature range of the damper.
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Stabbing resistance of soft ballistic body armour impregnated with shear thickening fluidXu, Yue January 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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Modeling micromechanics of solidluid interactions in granular mediaJohnson, Daniel 13 December 2019 (has links)
Micromechanics of solidluid interactions can play a key role controlling macro-scale engineering behavior of granular media. The main objective of this study is to numerically investigate the micromechanics involved in solidluid mixtures to develop a better understanding of the macroscopic behavior of granular media for different applications. This is accomplished by developing a numerical model coupling the Discrete Element Method (DEM) and the Lattice Boltzmann Method (LBM) and employing it to study three distinct yet interrelated applications throughout the course of this research. In the first application, the DEM model is used to provide a clear relationship between energy dissipated by micro-scale mechanisms versus the traditional engineering definition based on macro-scale (continuum) parameters to develop a better understanding for the frictional behavior of granular media. Macroscopic frictional behavior of granular materials is of great importance for studying several complex problems such as fault slip and landslides. In the second application, the DEM-LBM model is employed for studying the undrained condition of dense granular media. While the majority of previous modeling approaches did not realistically represent non-uniform strain conditions that exist in geomechanical problems, including the LBM in the proposed model offers a realistic approach to simulate the undrained condition since the fluid can locally conserve the system volume. For the third application, the DEM-LBM model is used to study discontinuous shear thickening in a dense solidluid suspension. Shear thickening in a fluid occurs when the viscosity of the fluid increases with increasing applied strain rate. The DEM-LBM results for discontinuous shear thickening were compared to experimental data and proved to be an accurate approach at reproducing this phenomenon. The validated DEM-LBM model is then used to develop a physics-based constitutive model for discontinuous shear thickening-shear thinning in granular medialuid suspension. A closedorm model is then calibrated using the DEM-LBM model and validated against existing experimental test results reported in the literature. Findings of this research demonstrate how micromechanical modeling can be employed to address challenging problems in granular media involving solidluid interaction.
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