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Intrinsic stress, description

General description. Incomplete penetration describes the condition in which the weld fails to reach the bottom of the weld joint, resulting in a notch located at the root of the weld (Fig. 15.12). This critical defect can substantially reduce the intrinsic mechanical strength of the joint and can combine with environmental factors to produce corrosion fatigue (Chap. 10), stress-corrosion cracking (Chap. 9), or crevice corrosion (Chap. 2). [Pg.335]

From Eq, (1) it is clear that a model of crystal polarization that is adequate for the description of the piezoelectric and pyroelectric properties of the P-phase of PVDF must include an accurate description of both the dipole moment of the repeat unit and the unit cell volume as functions of temperature and applied mechanical stress or strain. The dipole moment of the repeat unit includes contributions from the intrinsic polarity of chemical bonds (primarily carbon-fluorine) owing to differences in electron affinity, induced dipole moments owing to atomic and electronic polarizability, and attenuation owing to the thermal oscillations of the dipole. Previous modeling efforts have emphasized the importance of one more of these effects electronic polarizability based on continuum dielectric theory" or Lorentz field sums of dipole lattices" static, atomic level modeling of the intrinsic bond polarity" atomic level modeling of bond polarity and electronic and atomic polarizability in the absence of thermal motion. " The unit cell volume is responsive to the effects of temperature and stress and therefore requires a model based on an expression of the free energy of the crystal. [Pg.196]

The fact that the measured points of Fig. 3.1 lie more closely to the free-draining line, is in accordance with the experience obtained on anionic polystyrenes with other measuring techniques [dynamic oscillatory measurements (115), measurements of normal stresses (776)]. This result is quite surprising since for the description of intrinsic viscosity the non-draining case has clearly been shown to be valid (100). It will be shown below and in Chapter 4 that this inconsistency is in reality a consequence of the fact that the reduction with respect to concentration is less perfect than one would think at a first inspection of Fig. 3.1. [Pg.235]


See other pages where Intrinsic stress, description is mentioned: [Pg.319]    [Pg.731]    [Pg.293]    [Pg.13]    [Pg.272]    [Pg.176]    [Pg.209]    [Pg.283]    [Pg.159]    [Pg.1161]    [Pg.5107]    [Pg.5108]    [Pg.197]    [Pg.126]    [Pg.197]    [Pg.1541]    [Pg.11]    [Pg.120]    [Pg.209]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.483 ]




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Intrinsic description

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