The properties of a composite material are determined by the properties of the constitutive materials. In engineering practice, there are many situations in which we have composite material, but we do not have information about the properties of each phase component. The measurements we can make in such cases are on the existing material, thus being able to determine, experimentally, the global physical properties of the composite. The possibility of realizing an estimate of the mechanical properties of each component poses a problem if we start from these measurements. The paper proposes a method to achieve this, starting from the theoretical estimates established in the literature, then illustrated by an example to determine the properties of wood. Wood is a transverse isotropic material and therefore the constitutive law has symmetries that are manifested in the decrease of the number of parameters that define the stress-strain liason, defined only by five independent parameters. The proposed method can be extended to a diversity of models and materials used in the study of composite materials.
The paper aims to use Modern Dimensional Analysis to study the heat transmission through a rectangular bar with a hole. The problem is very important for monitoring a structure, made of such bars, to protect it from fire. The original part of the work is represented by the application of this nonconventional method in the field of heat transfer in bars of rectangular-tubular section. During system heating, the properties of the material change dramatically at high temperatures, which can lead to the collapse of the entire system. The Laws of the Model, further applied to the two sets of independent variables, provide the complete sets of dimensionless variables, which cannot be offered by any of the classical methods (such as Geometric Analogy, Theory of Similarity, and Classical Dimensional Analysis). The validation of the method was made experimental on both unprotected structural elements and those thermally protected with layers of intumescent paints, widely used in the field of fire protection. Finite Element Method was too applied to obtain the field of temperature in order to validate the model.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.