Institution
Sandia National Laboratories
Facility•Livermore, California, United States•
About: Sandia National Laboratories is a facility organization based out in Livermore, California, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Laser & Combustion. The organization has 21501 authors who have published 46724 publications receiving 1484388 citations. The organization is also known as: SNL & Sandia National Labs.
Topics: Laser, Combustion, Thin film, Hydrogen, Finite element method
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe how the peridynamic model can also be implemented in a conventional finite element analysis (FEA) code using truss elements, and demonstrate the utility and robustness of the method for problems involving fracture, damage and penetration.
498 citations
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TL;DR: The ability of the method to significantly outperform even the optimal linear-subspace ROM on benchmark advection-dominated problems is demonstrated, thereby demonstrating the method's ability to overcome the intrinsic $n$-width limitations of linear subspaces.
498 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a model coupling fracture, fragmentation, and stress wave propagation is proposed to describe the observed rate-dependent fracture phenomena from static to high strain-rate impulse loading.
497 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors used Raman scattering and laser-induced fluorescence to measure temperature, the major species (N2, O2, CH4, CO2, H2O, CO, and H2), OH, and NO in steady laminar opposed-flow partially premixed flames of methane and air.
495 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied stress corrosion in vitreous silica exposed to water and several nonaqueous environments; environments which enhance stress-corrosion crack growth in silica contain active groups with electron donor sites on one end and proton donor sites at the other.
Abstract: The mechanical strength of most glasses and ceramics decreases with time under static loading in an ambient environment. This strength loss is associated with slow growth of preexisting surface flaws due to stress corrosion by water from the surrounding environment. We studied stress corrosion in vitreous silica exposed to water and several nonaqueous environments; environments which enhance stress-corrosion crack growth in silica contain active groups with electron donor sites on one end and proton donor sites at the other. These results suggest a detailed chemical model for the interaction of the environment with mechanically strained bonds in the solid at the tip of a crack. The proposed model for stress-corrosion crack growth also has implications for the long-term strength behavior of a wide variety of brittle materials.
495 citations
Authors
Showing all 21652 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Lily Yeh Jan | 162 | 467 | 73655 |
Jongmin Lee | 150 | 2257 | 134772 |
Jun Liu | 138 | 616 | 77099 |
Gerbrand Ceder | 137 | 682 | 76398 |
Kevin M. Smith | 114 | 1711 | 78470 |
Henry F. Schaefer | 111 | 1611 | 68695 |
Thomas Bein | 109 | 677 | 42800 |
David Chandler | 107 | 424 | 52396 |
Stephen J. Pearton | 104 | 1913 | 58669 |
Harold G. Craighead | 101 | 569 | 40357 |
Edward Ott | 101 | 669 | 44649 |
S. Das Sarma | 100 | 951 | 58803 |
Richard M. Crooks | 97 | 419 | 31105 |
David W. Murray | 97 | 699 | 43372 |
Alán Aspuru-Guzik | 97 | 628 | 44939 |