000 02955cam a22002895a 4500
001 ssj0000811400
003 OSt
005 20150813152325.0
008 121208s2013 ne a frb 000 0 eng d
020 _a9789400741003
020 _a9400741006
040 _aEG-ScBUE
_beng
_cEG-ScBUE
_dEG-ScBUE
082 0 4 _a620.118
_bDVO
_222
100 1 _aDvorak, George J.,
_938308
_d1933-
245 1 0 _aMicromechanics of composite materials /
_cGeorge Dvorak.
260 _aDordrecht :
_bSpringer Science + Business Media,
_c2013.
300 _axvii, 442 p. :
_bill. ;
_c24 cm.
490 0 _aSolid Mechanics and Its Applications,
_x0925-0042 ;
_v186
500 _aIndex : p. 435-442.
504 _aBibliography : p. 409-434.
520 _aThis book presents a broad exposition of analytical and numerical methods for modeling composite materials, laminates, polycrystals and other heterogeneous solids, with emphasis on connections between material properties and responses on several length scales, ranging from the nano and microscales to the macroscale. Many new results and methods developed by the author are incorporated into a rich fabric of the subject, which has been explored by several researchers over the last 40 years. The first part of the book reviews anisotropic elasticity theory, and then it describes the frequently used procedures and theorems for bounding and estimating overall properties, local fields and energy changes in elastic inhomogeneities, heterogeneous media, fiber composites and functionally graded materials. Those are caused by mechanical loads and by phase eigenstrains, such as thermal, transformation and inelastic strains, and also by cavities and cracks. Worked examples show that the eigendeformations may contribute a major part of the overall response and of interior stress and strain fields in the constituents. Separate attention is given to perfect and imperfect interfaces, and to evaluation of interface stresses induced by mechanical and transformation loads. Micromechanical methods are extended to analysis of symmetric laminates. Applications include design of laminate configurations for pressure vessels, for dimensionally stable and auxetic laminates, for laminates with reduced free edge stresses and with fiber prestress, and for those sustaining damage by transverse cracking and fiber breaks. A review of the incremental theory of plasticity, of the transformation field analysis method, and of modeling and experimental results for metal matrix composites, are extensively described in the closing chapters. This volumeis intended for advanced undergraduate and graduate students, researchers and engineers interested and involved in analysis and design of composite structures.
650 0 _aComposite materials
_xMechanical properties.
_2BUEsh
650 0 _aMicromechanics.
_2BUEsh
_922992
651 _2BUEsh
653 _bENGMEC
_bENGGEN
_cJune2015
_cAugust2015
942 _2ddc
_k620.118 DVO
999 _c19705
_d19677