Results 221 to 230 of about 1,103,212 (315)
Analysis on the curvatures of weighted netting in flow field.
Suk Jong Kim +2 more
openalex +2 more sources
Phase‐field simulations coupled with dislocation‐density‐based crystal plasticity modeling reproduce γ′ rafting behavior in single‐crystal Ni‐based superalloys under varied loading conditions. The model captures both macroscopic creep and microscopic morphology evolution, with results matching high‐temperature creep experiments.
Micheal Younan +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Transient flow field characteristics of scraper pump based on viscosity wall strategy. [PDF]
Li M, Zhang H, Wang C, Zhang S, Zhang Z.
europepmc +1 more source
Numerical Simulation of Particle-Laden Plasma Flow in a Pipe Under an RF Electromagnetic Field.
Takehiko Sato, Hideya Nishiyama
openalex +2 more sources
Phase Field Failure Modeling: Brittle‐Ductile Dual‐Phase Microstructures under Compressive Loading
The approach by Amor and the approach by Miehe and Zhang for asymmetric damage behavior in the phase field method for fracture are compared regarding their fitness for microcrack‐based failure modeling. The comparison is performed for the case of a dual‐phase microstructure with a brittle and a ductile constituent.
Jakob Huber, Jan Torgersen, Ewald Werner
wiley +1 more source
CFD-based investigation of flow field in a glass furnace reactor under an oxy-fuel electric boosting mode. [PDF]
Zhang O +6 more
europepmc +1 more source
A buried‐junction DSPEC design is introduced that leverages cascade charge transfer to enhance efficiency, stability, and versatility. This approach facilitates effective charge transfer and minimizes recombination losses, leading to significant improvements.
Jun‐Hyeok Park +8 more
wiley +1 more source
The Initial Attitude Estimation of an Electromagnetic Projectile in the High-Temperature Flow Field Based on Mask R-CNN and the Multi-Constraints Genetic Algorithm. [PDF]
Chen J, Yu M, Guo Y, Gao C.
europepmc +1 more source
An experimental investigation of the wall-pressure field during turbulent incompressible pipe flow
Norman S. Williams
openalex +1 more source

