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COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (March 3, 2004) Setting his work up for failure
has placed Tennessee Tech University associate professor Chris Wilson
at the top of his profession in fatigue and fracture mechanics. A recent
recipient of the Keith J. Miller Young Investigator Award from the American
Society for Testing and Materials, Wilson has been recognized for his
significant contributions in a field where success is all about understanding
failure.
It is often easier to manufacture a product than to design a process
that allows you to study what happens when there are flaws or errors in
the manufacturing process that lead to mechanical failure said Wilson.
In our research, we try to replicate what happens when theres
a bad dayknowing that materials are inherently flawed.
The importance of this fracture and fatigue testing and analysis lies
with the stakes involved. The materials in Wilsons lab are often
the types used in modern military aircraft, space shuttle construction
and satellites where the loss of nearly one-of-a-kind hardware or the
potential loss of life is in the balance.
One of Wilsons graduate assistants, Richard Gregory, is currently
studying controlled porosity in just such a material: graphite/epoxy composites.
For specialized uses in the military or space exploration, the
consequences of failure in these materials is high, said Gregory.
To compare it to testing more ordinary materials, if you are driving
at truck at 30 miles an hour and have a flat tire, you can usually control
the vehicle and stop and change the tire. If you have a flat tire on a
racecar going 200 mph, youve created a much more dangerous situation.
In the graphite/epoxy composite we are testing, small voids can
jeopardize strength and durability, he said. We need to be
able to recreate the process in which the flaws occur so we can eliminate
them.
The recent NASA mission to Mars illustrates how using light-weight, damage-tolerant
materials can open up research possibilities. Wilson, who previously worked
at Marshall Space Flight Center, says space research is one of many areas
where reducing weight while maintaining strength saves money.
Its in vogue to talk in terms of what transporting weight
into space costs, said Wilson. Now it costs about $1,000 per
pound, but the goal is to build vehicles and equipment with lighter materials
and better fuel systems to reduce the cost to about $100 per pound.
ASTMs Young Investigator Award rewards a members significant
contributions to fatigue and fracture mechanics research at an early stage
in his/her professional career. The award reflects excellence in publications,
presentations, standards development activities and potential.
Wilson serves ASTMs Committee E08 on Fatigue and Fracture as task
group chairperson for software validation. He is also the secretary for
the research and education subcommittee. He and fellow TTU mechanical
engineering professor Dale Wilson have been recognized for their commitment
to expose their students to the broader community in their field through
symposia and workshops.
--Karen Lykins
This information posted 3 March 2004
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