• Title/Summary/Keyword: phase-field model

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Phase Field Modeling of Graphitization in Ductile Cast Iron by Strip Casting(I);Modeling of Phases with Negligible Solubility (스트립캐스팅한 구상흑연주철 박판의 흑연화 과정에 대한 phase-field 모델링 (I);고용도가 없는 상의 모델링)

  • Kim, Sung-Gyun;Ra, Hyung-Yong
    • Journal of Korea Foundry Society
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    • v.20 no.2
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    • pp.129-140
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    • 2000
  • This study aims at the phase-field modeling of the phase transformation in graphitization of the cast iron. As the first step, we constructed a phase-field model including the phases with negligible solubility. Under the dilute regular solution approximation, a simplified version of the phase-field model was obtained, which can be used for the phase transformation related with the stoichiometric phases. The results from the numerical calculation of the phase-field model was in good agreement with the exact analytic solution. The compositional shift due to Gibbs-Thomson effect can be reproduced within 0.5% error in the numerical calculation. The interface velocity, whereas, in numerical calculation of phase-field model appeared to be 15% larger than that from the analytic solution. This error is due to the shift of the interface position in phase-field model from the position with ${\phi}=0.5$.

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Nondestructive Evaluation of Railway Bridge by System Identification Using Field Vibration Measurement

  • Ho, Duc-Duy;Hong, Dong-Soo;Kim, Jeong-Tae
    • Journal of the Korean Society for Nondestructive Testing
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    • v.30 no.6
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    • pp.527-538
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    • 2010
  • This paper presents a nondestructive evaluation approach for system identification (SID) of real railway bridges using field vibration test results. First, a multi-phase SID scheme designed on the basis of eigenvalue sensitivity concept is presented. Next, the proposed multi-phase approach is evaluated from field vibration tests on a real railway bridge (Wondongcheon bridge) located in Yangsan, Korea. On the steel girder bridge, a few natural frequencies and mode shapes are experimentally measured under the ambient vibration condition. The corresponding modal parameters are numerically calculated from a three-dimensional finite element (FE) model established for the target bridge. Eigenvalue sensitivities are analyzed for potential model-updating parameters of the FE model. Then, structural subsystems are identified phase-by-phase using the proposed model-updating procedure. Based on model-updating results, a baseline model and a nondestructive evaluation of test bridge are identified.

THREE-DIMENSIONAL NUMERICAL SIMULATIONS OF A PHASE-FIELD MODEL FOR ANISOTROPIC INTERFACIAL ENERGY

  • Kim, Jun-Seok
    • Communications of the Korean Mathematical Society
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    • v.22 no.3
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    • pp.453-464
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    • 2007
  • A computationally efficient numerical scheme is presented for the phase-field model of two-phase systems for anisotropic interfacial energy. The scheme is solved by using a nonlinear multigrid method. When the coefficient for the anisotropic interfacial energy is sufficiently high, the interface of the system shows corners or missing crystallographic orientations. Numerical simulations with high and low anisotropic coefficients show excellent agreement with exact equilibrium shapes. We also present spinodal decomposition, which shows the robustness of the pro-posed scheme.

Numerical Calculation of Transformation Plasticity Using a FE Analysis Coupled with n Phase Field Model (상장모델과 유한요소법의 연계해석을 통한 변태소성 전산모사)

  • Cho, Y.G.;Kim, J.Y.;Cha, P.R.;Lee, J.K.;Han, H.N.
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society for Technology of Plasticity Conference
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    • 2009.05a
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    • pp.318-321
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    • 2009
  • Transformation plasticity is that when a phase transformation of ferrous or non-ferrous alloys progresses even under an extremely small applied stress compared with a yield stress of the material, a permanent deformation occurs. One of widely accepted description for the transformation was proposed by Greenwood and Johnson [1]. Their description is based on an assumption that a weaker phase of an ideal plastic material could deform plastically to accommodate the externally applied stress and the internal stress caused by the volumetric change accompanying the phase transformation. In this study, an implicit finite element model was developed to simulate the deformation behavior of a low carbon steel during phase transformation. The finite element model was coupled with a phase field model, which could simulate the kinetics for ferrite to austenite transformation of the steel. The thermo-elasto-plastic constitutive equation for each phase was adopted to confirm the weaker phase yielding, which was proposed by Greenwood and Johnson [1]. From the simulation, the origin of the transformation plasticity was quantitatively discussed comparing with the other descriptions of it.

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Three-phase-lag model on a micropolar magneto-thermoelastic medium with voids

  • Alharbi, Amnah M.;Othman, Mohamed I.A.;Al-Autabi, Al-Anoud M. Kh.
    • Structural Engineering and Mechanics
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    • v.78 no.2
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    • pp.187-197
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    • 2021
  • This paper harnesses a micropolar thermoelastic medium consisting of voids to scrutinize the impacts of a magnetic field on it. To assess the problem, the three-phase-lag model (3PHL) has been employed and the analytical expressions of various variables under consideration have been derived using normal model analysis. The paper presents a graphical illustration of the material's stress, temperature, and dimensionless displacement. It has also been ensured that the predictions associated with results by different theories are not neglected instead; they are used to carry out appropriate comparisons in scenarios where the magnetic field is present as well as absent. The numerical results indicate that the magnetic field and the phase-lag of heat flux play a vital role in determining the distribution of field quantities. Thus, the investigation helped derive various interesting cases.

PHASE FIELD MODELING OF CRYSTAL GROWTH

  • Sekerka, Robert F.
    • Proceedings of the Korea Association of Crystal Growth Conference
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    • 1996.06a
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    • pp.139-156
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    • 1996
  • The phase field model is becoming the model of choice for the theoretical study of the morphologies of crystals growth from the melt. This model provides an alternative approach to the solution of the classical (sharp interface) model of solidification by introducing a new variable, the phase field, Ø, to identify the phase. The variable Ø takes on constant values in the bulk phases and makes a continuous transition between these values over a thin transition layer that plays the role of the classically sharp interface. This results in Ø being governed by a new partial differential equation(in addition to the PDE's that govern the classical fields, such as temperature and composition) that guarantees (in the asymptotic limit of a suitably thin transition layer) that the appropriate boundary conditions at the crystal-melt interface are satisfied. Thus, one can proceed to solve coupled PDE's without the necessity of explicitly tracking the interface (free boundary) that would be necessary to solve the classical (sharp interface) model. Recent advances in supercomputing and algorithms now enable generation of interesting and valuable results that display most of the fundamental solidification phenomena and processes that are observed experimentally. These include morphological instability, solute trapping, cellular growth, dendritic growth (with anisotropic sidebranching, tip splitting, and coupling to periodic forcing), coarsening, recalescence, eutectic growth, faceting, and texture development. This talk will focus on the fundamental basis of the phase field model in terms of irreversible thermodynamics as well as it computational limitations and prognosis for future improvement. This work is supported by the National Science Foundation under grant DMR 9211276

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The effect of magnetic field and inclined load on a poro-thermoelastic medium using the three-phase-lag model

  • Samia M. Said
    • Geomechanics and Engineering
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    • v.37 no.3
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    • pp.243-251
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    • 2024
  • In the current work, a poro-thermoelastic half-space issue with temperature-dependent characteristics and an inclined load is examined in the framework of the three-phase-lag model (3PHL) while taking into account the effects of magnetic and gravity fields. The resulting coupled governing equations are non-dimensional and are solved by normal mode analysis. To investigate the impacts of the gravitational field, magnetic field, inclined load, and an empirical material constant, numerical findings are graphically displayed. MATLAB software is used for numerical calculations. Graphs are used to visualize and analyze the computational findings. It is found that the physical quantities are affected by the magnetic field, gravity field, the nonlocal parameter, the inclined load, and the empirical material constant.

Study of Li-Ion Diffusion and Phase Transition in Cathode of Li-Ion Battery (리튬 이차전지의 양극 내부 이온 확산 및 상변화 특성 연구)

  • Kim, Sooil;Kim, Dongchoul
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers B
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    • v.37 no.7
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    • pp.665-667
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    • 2013
  • Metal ions show various transitions in the cathode of a lithium-ion battery. The diffusion process of lithiumions and the phase transition in the cathode need to be thoroughly understood for the advanced design of an improved lithium-ion battery. Here, we employ a phase field model to simulate the diffusion of lithiumions and to study the phase transition in the cathode.

A viscoelastic-micropolar solid with voids and microtemperatures under the effect of the gravity field

  • Said, Samia M.
    • Geomechanics and Engineering
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    • v.31 no.2
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    • pp.159-166
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    • 2022
  • The model of two-dimensional plane waves is analyzed in a micropolar-thermoelastic solid with microtemperatures in the context of the three-phase-lag model, dual-phase-lag model, and the Green-Naghdi theory of type III. Harmonic wave analysis is used to hold the solution to the problem. Numerical results of the physical fields are visualized to show the effects of the gravity field, magnetic field, and viscosity. The expression for the field variables is obtained generally and represented graphically for a particular medium.

Grain Growth and Texture Evolution of Mg: Phase Field Modeling (마그네슘의 결정립 성장과 집합조직: 상장모델 계산)

  • Kim, Dong-Uk;Cha, Pil-Ryung
    • Journal of Powder Materials
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    • v.18 no.2
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    • pp.168-171
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    • 2011
  • We investigate grain growth behavior of poly-crystalline Mg sheet having strong basal fiber texture using phase field model for grain growth and micro-elasticity. Strong initial basal texture was maintained when external load was not imposed, but was weaken when external biaxial strain was imposed. Elastic interaction between elastic anisotropy of Mg grain and external load is the reason why texture evolution occurs.