Oct 14 2004
Air travel may become safer as a result of USC research into corrosion-induced failure in high-performance metals used in aerospace and other demanding applications.
Supercomputing specialist Priya Vashishta and his colleagues will model the behaviour of hundreds, thousands and millions of individual atoms to gain greater understanding of how and why alloys of titanium and other metals suffer “stress-corrosion cracking” - potentially catastrophic damage resulting from mechanical strain in chemically unfriendly environments.
In addition to the obvious safety implications, passengers may reap another bonus: coziness.
“Anyone who has travelled on an airplane knows the air is extremely dry,” said Vashishta, who has joint appointments in the USC Viterbi School of Engineering departments of materials science, biomedical engineering and computer science, and in the USC College of Letters, Arts and Sciences department of physics and astronomy. “And this is deliberate.”
“The purpose is to minimize corrosion of the airplane - which is accelerated by moisture - and extend its life,” the scientist said. “But if we can we understand more precisely how corrosion takes place, we may be able to find ways that will deal with the problem with less discomfort for travellers, while still keeping planes airworthy.”
Vashishta and long time collaborators Aichiro Nakano and Rajiv K. Kalia will be carrying out their investigations as part of an Information Technology Research project funded by the National Science Foundation.
Like Vashishta, Nakano and Kalia hold joint appointments in the Viterbi School departments of computer science, materials science and (for Kalia) biomedical engineering; and in the USC College department of physics and astronomy.
The trio will partner with Caltech and Purdue on the effort, one of 120 ITR projects funded by the NSF.
Vashishta and co-investigators will use new techniques of nanoscience to supplement the traditional structural engineering approach known as “continuum mechanics.” This technique involves extensive testing of material to establish parameters of performance for design engineers.
This works well in providing reliable forecasts of how the material will behave when new, said Vashishta. But it offers little guidance into how and when materials may fail because of stress-corrosion cracking (SCC) - damage from corrosion that starts when ordinary strain on the metal produces tiny cracks that allow the entrance of moisture and oxygen.
Nanoscientific analysis can supply such guidance, Vashishsta said. The idea is to go down to the basic atomic structure of the material and simulate the behaviour of individual atoms at the point where cracks appear in the surface.
“We start by accurately modelling the behaviour of collections of … a few hundred atoms at one point; proceed from there to modelling thousands of atoms along the surface, [and] going to millions of atoms over a larger area,” he explained.
The results of the nanoanalysis have to produce the same predictions for behaviour as the traditional continuum approach, Vashishta said.
“Corrosion is an enormously complex technological and economic problem with an annual cost of about 3 percent of the U.S. gross domestic product,” according to the proposal for the study.
“But by understanding exactly what is going on, in detail, at the point where the material is failing, we can find better ways to prevent damage and create more corrosion resistant materials.”
For more information on stress corrosion cracking, click here.