Impact evaluation Impact testing is a sort of mechanical test that is done on the material that was sampled to determine how much energy is absorbed during fracture. An object's resistance to high-rate loading is evaluated through impact testing. It is typically shown as two objects colliding at great relative speeds. The Charpy/Izode impact test, also known as the Charpy V-notch test, is a standardised high strain-rate test that quantifies how much energy a material absorbs prior to fracture. This absorbed energy serves as a tool to investigate temperature-dependent ductile-brittle transition and measures the notch toughness of a particular material. The impact test is used to forecast how a material will react to impact in real-world circumstances. Their conduct was impacted by the blemishes, imperfections, and notches. The test piece is struck and broken by a pendulum that is swinging back and forth. To determine the amount of energy the brake's specimen has absorbed, the "tup's" starting and final heights are noted.
Title : A proposal of chemical sensor based on polycrystalline Cu2O nanofilm
Paulo Cesar De Morais, Catholic University of Brasilia, Brazil
Title : Plant-mediated synthesis of silver nanoparticles and zinc oxide nanoparticles and application of AgNPs for the development of antimicrobial biopolymer films in food packaging
Garva Anup Karmarkar, Vishwakarma Institute of Technology, India
Title : Thermodynamic analysis of a combined modified Kalina–GT-MHR cycle with porous medium effects
Rakesh Manilal Harjivandas Patel, Government Science College, Gandhinagar, India
Title : Non-newtonian rheology on curved circular squeeze films using the Rabinowitsch fluid model
Rakesh Manilal Harjivandas Patel, Government Science College, Gandhinagar, India
Title : Ferrofluid mediated synthesis of nanomagnetic polymer materials in supercritical fluids
M G H Zaidi, G B Pant University of Agriculture & Technology, India
Title : Shape memory phenomena and twinning-detwinning reactions and crystallographic transformations in shape memory alloys
Osman Adiguzel, Firat University, Turkey