Hollow particulate composites are lightweight, have high compressive strength, are low moisture absorbent, have high damping materials, and are used extensively in aerospace, marine applications, and in the manufacture of sandwich composites core elements. The high performance of these materials is achieved by adding high strength hollow glass particulates (microballoons) to an epoxy matrix, forming epoxy-syntactic foams. The present study focuses on the effect of volume fraction and microballoon size on the ultrasonic and dynamic properties of Epoxy Syntactic Foams. Ultrasonic attenuation coefficient from an experiment is compared with a previously developed theoretical model for low volume fractions that takes into account attenuation loss due to scattering and absorption. The guidelines of ASTM Standard E 664-93 are used to compute the apparent attenuation. Quasi-static compressive tests were also conducted to fully characterize the material. Both quasi-static and dynamic properties, as well as coefficients of attenuation and ultrasonic velocities are found to be strongly dependent upon the volume fraction and size of the microballoons.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
July 2013
Research-Article
Dynamic Attenuation and Compressive Characterization of Syntactic Foams
Carl-Ernst Rousseau
Carl-Ernst Rousseau
Associate Professor
Mem. ASME
e-mail: rousseau@uri.edu
University of Rhode Island,
Mem. ASME
e-mail: rousseau@uri.edu
Department of Mechanical Engineering
,University of Rhode Island,
Kingston, RI 02881
Search for other works by this author on:
Bhaskar Ale
e-mail: bhaskarale@hotmail.com
Carl-Ernst Rousseau
Associate Professor
Mem. ASME
e-mail: rousseau@uri.edu
University of Rhode Island,
Mem. ASME
e-mail: rousseau@uri.edu
Department of Mechanical Engineering
,University of Rhode Island,
Kingston, RI 02881
Contributed by the Materials Division of ASME for publication in the Journal of Engineering Materials and Technology. Manuscript received July 18, 2012; final manuscript received February 7, 2013; published online May 6, 2013. Assoc. Editor: Hanchen Huang.
J. Eng. Mater. Technol. Jul 2013, 135(3): 031007 (6 pages)
Published Online: May 6, 2013
Article history
Received:
July 18, 2012
Revision Received:
February 7, 2013
Citation
Ale, B., and Rousseau, C. (May 6, 2013). "Dynamic Attenuation and Compressive Characterization of Syntactic Foams." ASME. J. Eng. Mater. Technol. July 2013; 135(3): 031007. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4023850
Download citation file:
Get Email Alerts
Cited By
Reviewer's Recognition
J. Eng. Mater. Technol (July 2025)
Forming limits of thin ferritic stainless steel for fuel cell application
J. Eng. Mater. Technol
Related Articles
Thermal Analysis of In-Situ Curing for Thermoset, Hoop-Wound Structures Using Infrared Heating: Part II—Dependent Scattering Effect
J. Heat Transfer (August,1995)
Scattering of an Impact Wave by a Crack in a Composite Plate
J. Appl. Mech (September,1992)
Selective Radiative Preheating of Aluminum in Composite Solid Propellant Combustion
J. Heat Transfer (February,1987)
Ultrasonic Wave Scattering by a Subsurface Flaw in Joined Fluid-Solid Half Spaces
J. Appl. Mech (December,1983)
Related Proceedings Papers
Related Chapters
The MCRT Method for Participating Media
The Monte Carlo Ray-Trace Method in Radiation Heat Transfer and Applied Optics
Scattering of Out-Plane Line Source Load by a Shallow-Embedded Circular Lining Structure and the Ground Motion
Geological Engineering: Proceedings of the 1 st International Conference (ICGE 2007)
Study on Load Position Switching of Radial Scattering Dispenser
International Conference on Mechanical Engineering and Technology (ICMET-London 2011)