Journal Articles

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    Enhancing the ignition, hardness and compressive response of magnesium by reinforcing with hollow glass microballoons
    (MDPI AG Postfach Basel CH-4005, 2017) Manakari, V.; Parande, G.; Doddamani, M.; Gupta, M.
    Magnesium (Mg)/glass microballoons (GMB) metal matrix syntactic foams (1.47-1.67 g/cc) were synthesized using a disintegrated melt deposition (DMD) processing route. Such syntactic foams are of great interest to the scientific community as potential candidate materials for the ever-changing demands in automotive, aerospace, and marine sectors. The synthesized composites were evaluated for their microstructural, thermal, and compressive properties. Results showed that microhardness and the dimensional stability of pure Mg increased with increasing GMB content. The ignition response of these foams was enhanced by -22 °C with a 25 wt % GMB addition to the Mg matrix. The authors of this work propose a new parameter, ignition factor, to quantify the superior ignition performance that the developed Mg foams exhibit. The room temperature compressive strengths of pure Mg increased with the addition of GMB particles, with Mg-25 wt % GMB exhibiting the maximum compressive yield strength (CYS) of 161 MPa and an ultimate compressive strength (UCS) of 232 MPa for a GMB addition of 5 wt % in Mg. A maximum failure strain of 37.7% was realized in Mg-25 wt % GMB foam. The addition of GMB particles significantly enhanced the energy absorption by -200% prior to compressive failure for highest filler loading, as compared to pure Mg. Finally, microstructural changes in Mg owing to the presence of hollow GMB particles were elaborately discussed. © 2017 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
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    Compressive behavior of cenosphere/epoxy syntactic foams in arctic conditions
    (Elsevier Ltd, 2018) Shahapurkar, K.; Garcia, C.D.; Doddamani, M.; Mohan Kumar, G.C.; Prabhakar, P.
    In this paper, the effects of arctic condition on the compressive response of ceno-sphere/epoxy syntactic foams are investigated. Understanding the behavior of such foams under extreme conditions is critical for exploring their suitability for constructing lightweight platforms used in arctic explorations, which are exposed to subzero temperatures for extended periods of time potentially degrading their mechanical properties. In the research study presented here, samples of cenosphere/epoxy syntactic foams were conditioned under arctic environment at a temperature of ?60 °C for a period of 57 days. Compression tests were then conducted at room temperature as well as in-situ ?60 °C on the conditioned samples and compared against unconditioned samples tested at room temperature. Combinations of surface modification and cenosphere volume fractions were considered. For the case of unconditioned samples, compressive strength decreased with increasing cenosphere volume fraction for both surface modified and unmodified cenospheres. For the arctic conditioned samples, cenospheres/epoxy foams did not present visible signs of degradation prior to testing, but manifested a reduction in compressive modulus in a range of 47–57% and 47–65% for untreated and treated cenospheres/epoxy syntactic foams as compared to their unconditioned counterparts. On the other hand, the compressive strength increased in a range between 32–68% for untreated and 59–80% for treated cenosphere foams in arctic environment, which can be attributed to the matrix hardening introduced by frigid in-situ environment. Also, under in-situ arctic compressive loading, the post peak response for all foam types have shifted from a progressive failure to a brittle type behavior. © 2017 Elsevier Ltd
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    Compressive behavior of fly ash based 3D printed syntactic foam composite
    (Elsevier B.V., 2019) Patil, B.; Bharath Kumar, B.R.; Doddamani, M.
    Syntactic foams are widely used in damage tolerance and low-density applications. In present work compressive behavior of 3D printed three-phase syntactic foams under quasi-static strain rates (0.001, 0.01 and 0.1 s?1) are investigated. Extruded filaments of High density polyethylene (HDPE) with environmentally pollutant fly ash cenospheres (0, 20, 40 and 60 vol%) are used for 3D printing. Micrography reveal that syntactic foam filament and 3D printed samples are three phase systems comprising matrix, cenosphere and porosity. Matrix porosity of about 7% makes these foams lightweight and suitable for buoyant applications. The compressive properties are extracted from the stress-strain plots. It is observed that modulus and specific modulus increases with strain rate and cenosphere content. Specific compressive strength increases with strain rate and decrease with cenosphere content. © 2019 Elsevier B.V.