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18 pages, 60393 KB  
Article
Mineralogical Characteristics of White Nephrite from Dikou, Fujian Province, Southeastern China
by Shuo Ran and Yingxin Liu
Crystals 2026, 16(5), 284; https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst16050284 - 24 Apr 2026
Abstract
Nephrite is a significant jade resource, and systematic investigation of its deposits contributes to regional metallogenic synthesis and exploration targeting. The recently discovered white nephrite deposit in the Dikou area, Fujian Province, remains inadequately characterized. This study presents a comprehensive mineralogical investigation employing [...] Read more.
Nephrite is a significant jade resource, and systematic investigation of its deposits contributes to regional metallogenic synthesis and exploration targeting. The recently discovered white nephrite deposit in the Dikou area, Fujian Province, remains inadequately characterized. This study presents a comprehensive mineralogical investigation employing polarizing microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, electron probe microanalysis, X-ray powder diffraction and laser Raman spectroscopy to elucidate the mineralogical and petrochemical characteristics of Dikou nephrite and constrain its genesis. The results demonstrate that tremolite constitutes the predominant mineral phase, accompanied by abundant diopside and quartz, with minor dolomite, prehnite, and apatite. Based on subtle compositional variations, tremolite can be categorized into two generations: early metasomatic Tr-I and late-stage Tr-II. All tremolite samples exhibit Fe-depleted, Mg-enriched composition with Mg# > 0.99. The mineral assemblage and textural relationships record multiple episodes of hydrothermal metasomatism. Integrated with the regional geological constraints, the deposit formation is genetically linked to the Neoproterozoic–Early Paleozoic ocean–continent transition of the South China Plate and is classified as D-type nephrite. The Dikou nephrite exhibits the mineral assemblage typical of dolomite-related deposits, displaying a distinctive felt-like fibrous texture that yields a homogeneous structure and superior aesthetic quality. Its Fe-depleted composition imparts a notably lighter coloration relative to D-type nephrite from other deposits. This study advances understanding of Dikou nephrite genesis, highlights the diversity of metallogenic environments in Fujian Province, and provides a theoretical framework for exploration of analogous deposits. Full article
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16 pages, 4551 KB  
Article
In Situ Full-Scale Uplift Tests and Three-Dimensional Numerical Analysis of Squeezed Branch Piles in Coastal Reclaimed Areas
by Yi Zeng, Zhenyuan He, Yuewei Bian, Xiaoping Li, Yue Gao and Yanbin Fu
Symmetry 2026, 18(4), 674; https://doi.org/10.3390/sym18040674 - 17 Apr 2026
Viewed by 116
Abstract
Coastal reclaimed areas are characterized by complex strata and high groundwater levels, and pile foundations in such areas often suffer from insufficient uplift resistance. Compared with conventional cast-in-place piles, squeezed branch piles exhibit superior uplift performance; however, studies on squeezed branch piles in [...] Read more.
Coastal reclaimed areas are characterized by complex strata and high groundwater levels, and pile foundations in such areas often suffer from insufficient uplift resistance. Compared with conventional cast-in-place piles, squeezed branch piles exhibit superior uplift performance; however, studies on squeezed branch piles in reclaimed areas remain limited. To investigate the uplift bearing performance of squeezed branch piles in the complex strata of coastal reclaimed areas, in situ full-scale uplift tests were conducted in the Shenzhen Binhai Avenue (Headquarters Base Section) traffic reconstruction project. Based on the actual physical and mechanical properties of the soil strata, a three-dimensional numerical model was established and validated against the load–displacement curves obtained from the in situ full-scale uplift tests. On this basis, the uplift bearing performance of squeezed branch piles, the differences in uplift bearing performance between branch and plate structures, and their applicable strata were analyzed. The plate structure and different branch configurations of squeezed branch piles exhibit distinct symmetric configuration characteristics, and these configuration differences influence the overall uplift bearing performance. The results show that the load–displacement curves of the uplift piles are generally smooth, without obvious abrupt rises or drops, exhibiting a gradual variation pattern, and the maximum pile-head displacements are all less than 100 mm. The mobilization of the bearing capacity of the branch and plate structures exhibits a distinct temporal and sequential pattern, with the plate structures at shallower embedment depths mobilized earlier than those at greater depths. Compared with conventional cast-in-place pile foundations, the presence of branches and plates endows squeezed branch piles with better elastic mechanical behavior and higher rebound ratios during unloading. Under identical stratum and loading conditions, the uplift bearing performance of the plate is 133% higher than that of the six-radial-branch configuration, while that of the six-radial-branch configuration is 34% higher than that of the four-radial-branch configuration. It is recommended to adopt the six-radial-branch configuration in clayey sandy gravel strata and the plate configuration in gravelly clayey soil and completely weathered coarse-grained granite strata, whereas neither branches nor plates are recommended in soil-like strongly weathered coarse-grained granite strata. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Engineering and Materials)
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21 pages, 2056 KB  
Article
Study on the Multi-Factor Coupling Mechanism Affecting the Permeability of Remolded Clay
by Huanxiao Hu, Shifan Shen, Huatang Shi and Wenqin Yan
Geotechnics 2026, 6(2), 35; https://doi.org/10.3390/geotechnics6020035 - 9 Apr 2026
Viewed by 195
Abstract
To address the critical challenges of geological hazards, such as water and mud inrush, encountered during the construction of deep-buried tunnels in China, this study investigates the hydraulic properties of remolded mud-infill materials. A multi-scale approach, integrating indoor variable-head permeability tests with scanning [...] Read more.
To address the critical challenges of geological hazards, such as water and mud inrush, encountered during the construction of deep-buried tunnels in China, this study investigates the hydraulic properties of remolded mud-infill materials. A multi-scale approach, integrating indoor variable-head permeability tests with scanning electron microscopy (SEM), was employed to characterize the evolutionary patterns of the permeability coefficient (k). Specifically, the research evaluates the independent influences of moisture content, dry density, and confining pressure, alongside the synergistic coupling between dry density and hydration state. The results demonstrate the following: Under independent variable conditions, k exhibits a monotonic decline with increasing dry density and confining pressure while showing a positive correlation with moisture content, with the sensitivity varying significantly across different parameter regimes; under coupled effects, the permeability in both low- and high-moisture ranges manifests a distinct “increase–decrease–increase” fluctuation as dry density rises, reaching a local peak at 2.20 g/cm3. Notably, a relative minimum k (6.12 × 10−7 cm/s) is achieved at the optimum moisture content (5.8%); micro-mechanistic analysis reveals that low-moisture samples are characterized by randomized angular particles and well-developed interconnected macropore networks, facilitating higher k values. Conversely, high-moisture samples exhibit preferential plate-like stacking dominated by occluded micropores, resulting in a substantial reduction in hydraulic conductivity. This study elucidates the multi-factor coupling mechanism governing the seepage behavior of remolded mud, providing essential theoretical benchmarks for the prediction and mitigation of water–mud outburst disasters in deep underground engineering, thereby ensuring the structural stability and operational safety of tunnel projects. Full article
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20 pages, 19535 KB  
Article
The Effect of Structural States on the Microstructure and Mechanical Properties of Low-Activation Austenitic Steel After Long-Term Thermal Exposure at 700 °C
by Igor Litovchenko, Sergey Akkuzin, Nadezhda Polekhina, Valeria Osipova, Anna Kim, Kseniya Spiridonova and Vyacheslav Chernov
J. Manuf. Mater. Process. 2026, 10(4), 126; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmmp10040126 - 8 Apr 2026
Viewed by 309
Abstract
The microstructure of a high-manganese low-activation austenitic steel after aging for 500 and 1000 h at 700 °C was investigated using transmission and scanning electron microscopy. Two structural states were examined: cold rolling (CR) and high-temperature thermomechanical treatment (HTMT). After CR, aging leads [...] Read more.
The microstructure of a high-manganese low-activation austenitic steel after aging for 500 and 1000 h at 700 °C was investigated using transmission and scanning electron microscopy. Two structural states were examined: cold rolling (CR) and high-temperature thermomechanical treatment (HTMT). After CR, aging leads to the precipitation of dispersed M23C6 carbides (M = Cr, W), primarily along grain and deformation twin boundaries. After HTMT, these particles are mainly localized at grain and low-angle boundaries. With increasing aging time, both the size and volume fraction of the particles increase. In both states, the microtwin and substructure are partially retained after aging. Local regions corresponding to the early stages of recrystallization were identified after both treatments. These regions were associated with intense decomposition of the supersaturated solid solution and the coarsening of carbide particles. The mechanical properties were evaluated by tensile testing at 20, 650, and 700 °C. Aging reduced average ductility after both treatments and at all test temperatures, with this trend persisting with increasing aging time. After CR and aging, a significant scatter in elongation to failure was observed, with minimum values of ≈2–3%. This behavior is attributed to the high density of plate-like M23C6 carbides at grain and microtwin boundaries. Microcrack formation and intercrystalline fracture features were observed, directly linked to the high density of boundary carbides. These effects were less pronounced in the HTMT condition after aging. In this paper, strategies for suppressing carbide precipitation in high-manganese low-activation austenitic steels via chemical composition and thermomechanical processing optimization are discussed. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Deformation and Mechanical Behavior of Metals and Alloys)
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18 pages, 23995 KB  
Article
Developmental Remodeling of the Auditory Hair Cell Cuticular Plate Defines Transient and Mature Structural Domains
by Ai Liu, Shang Gao, Yilin Du, Zhilin Dou, Weiqing Liu, Sihao Xu, Wenjie Sun, Xi Li, Jiangxia Li, Qiji Liu and Yecheng Jin
Cells 2026, 15(7), 574; https://doi.org/10.3390/cells15070574 - 24 Mar 2026
Viewed by 392
Abstract
The cuticular plate, a dense F-actin meshwork anchoring stereocilia in auditory hair cells (HCs), undergoes dynamic remodeling during development, but its structural transitions remain poorly understood. Here, we identified two distinct structural domains associated with this maturation. First, a transient F-actin-free area emerges [...] Read more.
The cuticular plate, a dense F-actin meshwork anchoring stereocilia in auditory hair cells (HCs), undergoes dynamic remodeling during development, but its structural transitions remain poorly understood. Here, we identified two distinct structural domains associated with this maturation. First, a transient F-actin-free area emerges within the lateral periphery of the developing cuticular plate, presenting as a crescent-shaped region that disappears upon HC maturation. Second, the lateral margin of the mature cuticular plate itself remodels into a persistent step-like structure, exhibiting cell-type-specific geometries in inner versus outer HCs. The consistent coincidence between Gαi-GPSM2 complex disruption and aberrant development of both structures in mutant mice implies a role for this complex in their formation. Additionally, microtubules spatially complemented F-actin distribution, suggesting coordinated cytoskeletal regulation. These findings revealed a sophisticated developmental program for cuticular plate maturation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Molecular Anatomy and Function of Sensory Organs and Sensory Tissues)
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15 pages, 5166 KB  
Article
Improving and Optimizing Mechanical Properties of Glass Fiber-Reinforced Composites via Geometric Optimization of Nanofillers Using Co-Curing Processes
by Eonsu Yun, Hyunjong Choi, Joon Seok Lee, Byoung-Sun Lee and Hyunchul Ahn
Polymers 2026, 18(6), 777; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym18060777 - 23 Mar 2026
Viewed by 429
Abstract
This study investigates the effects of the co-curing process and nanoparticle reinforcement on the mechanical performance of plain-woven glass fiber-reinforced plastic (GFRP) adhesive joints, aiming to address the limitations of traditional fastening methods and the inherent brittleness of epoxy adhesives. Specifically, spherical silica [...] Read more.
This study investigates the effects of the co-curing process and nanoparticle reinforcement on the mechanical performance of plain-woven glass fiber-reinforced plastic (GFRP) adhesive joints, aiming to address the limitations of traditional fastening methods and the inherent brittleness of epoxy adhesives. Specifically, spherical silica (SiO2) and plate-like graphene nanoplatelets (GNPs) were incorporated into the epoxy matrix at varying concentrations (0.25 to 1.0 wt.%) to evaluate the influence of particle geometry on joint integrity. Experimental results demonstrated that the co-curing technique yields superior mechanical properties compared to secondary bonding, exhibiting improvements of 35% in shear strength (from 10.97 MPa to 14.83 MPa) and 12% in flexural strength (from 72.57 MPa to 81.28 MPa) due to enhanced chemical interlocking. Furthermore, the addition of nanoparticles significantly improved joint performance, with the optimal content identified at 0.75 wt.% for both particle types. Notably, GNPs outperformed SiO2, enhancing shear and flexural strengths compared to the neat co-cured baseline. Ultimately, the 0.75 wt.% GNP-reinforced material exhibited a shear strength of 21.22 MPa and a flexural strength of 104.09 MPa. Morphological analysis revealed that while SiO2 contributes to reinforcement primarily via crack deflection, the high-aspect-ratio GNPs provide superior energy dissipation through crack bridging and pull-out mechanisms. Consequently, this study suggests that the co-curing process combined with an optimal concentration of GNPs presents a highly effective strategy for maximizing the reliability and structural efficiency of composite joints in weight-critical applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Polymer Composites and Nanocomposites)
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29 pages, 3082 KB  
Article
Multi-Objective Optimization of Thermal and Mechanical Performance of Prismatic Aluminum Shell Lithium Battery Module with Integrated Biomimetic Liquid Cooling Plate
by Yi Zheng and Xu Zhang
Batteries 2026, 12(3), 106; https://doi.org/10.3390/batteries12030106 - 19 Mar 2026
Viewed by 608
Abstract
Addressing the thermal management challenges of prismatic aluminum shell lithium battery modules in electric vehicles under high-rate charge–discharge conditions, this study proposes a multi-objective optimization design method for integrated biomimetic liquid cooling plates. By integrating various highly efficient heat transfer structures from nature, [...] Read more.
Addressing the thermal management challenges of prismatic aluminum shell lithium battery modules in electric vehicles under high-rate charge–discharge conditions, this study proposes a multi-objective optimization design method for integrated biomimetic liquid cooling plates. By integrating various highly efficient heat transfer structures from nature, including fractal-tree-like networks, leaf vein branching systems, and spider web radial distribution, a novel biomimetic liquid cooling plate topology was constructed. A multi-physics coupled numerical model considering electrochemical heat generation, thermal conduction, convective heat transfer, and thermal stress deformation was established. The NSGA-II algorithm was employed to globally optimize 12 design variables including channel geometric parameters, operating conditions, and structural dimensions, achieving collaborative optimization objectives of maximum temperature minimization, temperature uniformity maximization, pressure drop minimization, and structural lightweighting. The weight coefficients for the four optimization objectives were determined through the Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP) with verified consistency (CR = 0.02 < 0.10), ensuring rational priority allocation aligned with automotive safety standards. The optimization results demonstrated that compared to the initial design, the optimal solution reduced the maximum temperature under 3C discharge conditions by 9.9% to 34.7 °C, decreased the temperature difference by 31.3% to 3.3 °C, lowered the pressure drop by 24.6% to 2150 Pa, reduced structural mass by 4.0%, and decreased maximum stress by 16.7%. Quantitative comparison with single biomimetic structures under identical boundary conditions showed that the integrated design achieved a 3.3% lower maximum temperature and 25.7% better flow uniformity than the best-performing single structure, demonstrating the synergistic advantages of multi-biomimetic integration. These synergistic performance improvements can be attributed to the hierarchical multi-scale architecture where fractal networks provide macro-scale flow distribution, leaf vein branches ensure meso-scale coverage, and spider web radials achieve micro-scale thermal matching. Long-term cycling tests conducted at 1C/1C rate with 25 ± 1 °C ambient temperature showed that the optimized design maintained a capacity retention rate of 92.3% after 1000 charge–discharge cycles, demonstrating excellent durability. The complex biomimetic channel structure can be fabricated using selective laser melting technology with minimum feature sizes below 0.3 mm, indicating promising manufacturing feasibility. The research findings provide theoretical guidance and technical support for the engineering design of high-performance battery thermal management systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Battery Modelling, Simulation, Management and Application)
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13 pages, 3835 KB  
Article
Nanotexturing onto Laser-Microtextured Surface via Nickel Wet-Plating for IR-Emissivity Control
by Tatsuhiko Aizawa, Hiroki Nakata and Takeshi Nasu
J. Manuf. Mater. Process. 2026, 10(3), 95; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmmp10030095 - 11 Mar 2026
Viewed by 313
Abstract
Short-pulse laser machining was employed to transform the flat copper sheet into a microtextured specimen. This specimen was further nanotextured using the nickel wet-plating to build up the IR (InfraRed)-emission metallic device with fractal-like surface. Four-unit cells were designed and fabricated as a [...] Read more.
Short-pulse laser machining was employed to transform the flat copper sheet into a microtextured specimen. This specimen was further nanotextured using the nickel wet-plating to build up the IR (InfraRed)-emission metallic device with fractal-like surface. Four-unit cells were designed and fabricated as a micro-/nanotextured specimen by varying the microtextured unit cell structure. The IR-emissivity of these four specimens was measured using the thermographic microscopy with FT-IR (Fourier Transform InfraRed). The bare copper and nickel-nanotextured copper specimens were utilized as a reference. The micro-/nanotextured copper specimen had higher IR-emissivity than 0.8 in the wide wavelength range from 2 μm to 14 μm. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Laser Surface Modification: Advances and Applications)
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39 pages, 5668 KB  
Review
On Bio-Inspired Strategies for Flow Control, Fluid–Structure Interaction, and Thermal Transport
by Farid Ahmed and Leonardo P. Chamorro
Biomimetics 2026, 11(2), 143; https://doi.org/10.3390/biomimetics11020143 - 13 Feb 2026
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1172
Abstract
Bio-inspired engineering draws on principles refined by natural evolution to tackle persistent challenges in fluid mechanics, structural dynamics, and thermal transport. This article presents a critical, mechanism-driven narrative review that integrates recent advances across three complementary domains that are often treated independently, namely: [...] Read more.
Bio-inspired engineering draws on principles refined by natural evolution to tackle persistent challenges in fluid mechanics, structural dynamics, and thermal transport. This article presents a critical, mechanism-driven narrative review that integrates recent advances across three complementary domains that are often treated independently, namely: flow-control strategies such as leading-edge tubercles, alula-like devices, riblets, superhydrophobic skins, and hybrid low-Reynolds-number fliers; fluid-structure interactions inspired by aquatic and aerial organisms that leverage compliant foils, flexible filaments, ciliary arrays, and piezoelectric fluttering plates for propulsion, wake regulation, mixing, and energy harvesting; and phase-change heat-transfer surfaces modeled after stomata, porous biological networks, and textured cuticles that enhance nucleation control, liquid replenishment, and droplet or bubble removal. Rather than providing an exhaustive catalog of biological analogues, this review emphasizes the underlying physical mechanisms that link these domains and enable multifunctional performance. These developments reveal shared physical principles, including multiscale geometry, capillary- and vortex-mediated transport, and compliance-enabled flow tuning, which motivate the integrated treatment of aerodynamic, hydrodynamic, and thermal systems in applications spanning aerospace, energy conversion, and microscale thermal management. The review assesses persistent challenges associated with scaling biological architectures, ensuring long-term durability, and modeling tightly coupled fluid-thermal-structural interactions. By synthesizing insights across flow control, fluid-structure interaction, and phase-change heat transfer, this review provides a unifying conceptual framework that distinguishes it from prior domain-specific reviews. Emerging opportunities in hybrid multi-mechanism designs, data-driven optimization, multiscale modeling, and advanced fabrication are identified as promising pathways to accelerate the translation of biological strategies into robust, multifunctional thermal–fluid systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Biomimetic Engineering for Fluid Manipulation and Flow Control)
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18 pages, 3878 KB  
Article
A Comparative Study of Microstructure and Tribological Properties of Electroless Ni-P, Ni-W-P, and Ni-Ce-P Coatings on 6061 Aluminum Alloy: The Role of Heat Treatment
by Kailin Xue, Jiangping Nan and Tao Liu
Coatings 2026, 16(2), 197; https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings16020197 - 4 Feb 2026
Viewed by 453
Abstract
This study conducts a systematic comparison of binary Ni-P, ternary Ni-W-P, and ternary Ni-Ce-P electroless coatings on 6061-T6 aluminum alloy, focusing on the effects of post-plating heat treatment at 300, 350, and 400 °C. The originality of this work lies in its direct [...] Read more.
This study conducts a systematic comparison of binary Ni-P, ternary Ni-W-P, and ternary Ni-Ce-P electroless coatings on 6061-T6 aluminum alloy, focusing on the effects of post-plating heat treatment at 300, 350, and 400 °C. The originality of this work lies in its direct comparison of W and Ce doping under identical conditions and its identification of a critical brittle transition that decouples hardness from wear resistance. All coatings achieved peak hardness at 350 °C, with Ni-W-P reaching approximately 1691 ± 45 HV0.1 due to Ni3P precipitation and solid-solution strengthening. However, a key finding is the severe embrittlement of the Ni-P coating at 300 °C, where its wear rate increased by over 50 times despite a hardness increase. Treatment at 400 °C degraded wear performance across all systems, likely due to precipitate coarsening and substrate over-aging. The best overall performance within the tested window was achieved with the Ni-Ce-P coating heat-treated at 350 °C for 1 h, which exhibited a fine nodular structure and reduced the wear rate by 98.9% compared to the bare substrate. These results highlight the importance of balancing hardness and toughness, identifying an optimized processing window for enhancing the tribological performance of lightweight aluminum components. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Corrosion- and Wear-Resistant Coatings)
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29 pages, 5878 KB  
Article
Vibration-Based Structural Health Monitoring of Laminated Composite Beams Using Finite Element Modal and Harmonic Analysis
by Mahendran Govindasamy, Gopalakrishnan Kamalakannan and Ganesh Kumar Meenashisundaram
J. Compos. Sci. 2026, 10(2), 79; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcs10020079 - 3 Feb 2026
Viewed by 678
Abstract
The present study extends the previous work which was concerned with the identification of damage in GFRP composite plates by damage detection algorithms such as the Normalized Curvature Damage Factor (NCDF), Strain Energy Difference (SED), and Damage Index (DI), using a novel damage [...] Read more.
The present study extends the previous work which was concerned with the identification of damage in GFRP composite plates by damage detection algorithms such as the Normalized Curvature Damage Factor (NCDF), Strain Energy Difference (SED), and Damage Index (DI), using a novel damage (crack) modeling technique called the ‘Node-Releasing Technique’ (NRT) in Finite Element Analysis (FEA) for modeling and detecting perpendicular and slant partial-depth cracks in GFRP composite beams. This study explores the sensitivity of the damage modeling technique NRT in damage detection for composite beams using the NCDF algorithm, since it was concluded in the previous work that the NCDF performs better compared to the other methods when detecting both perpendicular and slant partial-depth cracks. This study also examines the variations in the Frequency Response Function (FRF) as another novel tool for identifying even small-scale damage. Most prior research in this domain has focused on variations in natural frequency, displacement mode shape, and damping as indicators for detecting and localizing structural damage through various experimental, theoretical, and computational approaches. However, these conventional parameters often lack the sensitivity required to detect small-scale damage and, still, there exists a gap in the use of the node-releasing technique in FEA to model the partial-depth perpendicular and slant crack damage in laminated composite structures, such as beam-like structures. To fill this gap, the present study attempts to use Curvature Mode Shapes (CMS)-based NCDF, obtained from numerical modal analysis, and variations in the Frequency Response Function (FRF), obtained through harmonic analysis, as more sensitive indicators for damage detection in laminated composite beams. FEA simulations are performed using the commercial FEA software package ANSYS 2021 R1 to obtain the first five flexural natural frequencies and the corresponding displacement mode shapes of both the intact and damaged composite beams. The curvature mode shapes are obtained from the displacement mode shapes data using the central difference approximation method to compute the NCDF. Simultaneously, GFRP composite beams were fabricated by the hand lay-up method, and Experimental Modal Analysis (EMA) was employed to substantiate the FE model and the validity of the numerical results. By combining both numerical and experimental methods, we proved that NCDF and FRF are reliable tools to determine and locate structural damage, even at a comparatively small scale. In general, the results indicate that NCDF is a stable and practically applicable parameter to locate cracks in laminated composite beams and provide meaningful information to be used as guidelines in applications of vibration-based structural health monitoring. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Composites Modelling and Characterization)
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27 pages, 8433 KB  
Article
Polygonal Crack Evolution in Multilayered Rocks Under Cooling Contraction
by Tiantian Chen, Yu Jiang, Zhengzhao Liang, Chun’an Tang and Tao Geng
Fractal Fract. 2026, 10(2), 107; https://doi.org/10.3390/fractalfract10020107 - 3 Feb 2026
Viewed by 578
Abstract
Multilayered geological structures are common in geotechnical engineering, where cooling shrinkage induces polygonal cracks in interlayers, compromising rock mass strength, permeability, and long-term stability. Existing thermo-mechanical studies on layered rock cracking insufficiently address the combined effects of weak interlayer geometry or interface-regulated mechanisms. [...] Read more.
Multilayered geological structures are common in geotechnical engineering, where cooling shrinkage induces polygonal cracks in interlayers, compromising rock mass strength, permeability, and long-term stability. Existing thermo-mechanical studies on layered rock cracking insufficiently address the combined effects of weak interlayer geometry or interface-regulated mechanisms. To address this gap, based on meso-damage mechanics and thermodynamics, this study adopts a thermo-mechanical coupling simulation method considering rock heterogeneity, innovatively focusing on the understudied stress transfer effect at strong–weak interlayer interfaces. Systematic investigations were conducted on the initiation, propagation, and saturation of polygonal cracks in plate-like layered rocks under surface cooling, analyzing the influences of weak interlayer thickness, number, and position, and comparing surface vs. inner interlayer behaviors. Results showed that stress transfer interruption at weak–strong layer interfaces can inhibit crack propagation. Inter weak interlayers produce significantly more cracks and fragments than surface weak interlayers, with a stratified crack length distribution, and the maximum fragment area increases exponentially with weak interlayer thickness. Crack development is strongly influenced by weak interlayer thickness, with thinner layers dominated by non-penetrating cracks and thicker layers tending to develop penetrating lattice-like cracks. The inter layer stress and crack distribution exhibit fractal characteristics, with crack density decreasing layer by layer and no new cracks forming after saturation. This study clarifies the regulatory mechanism of weak interlayer features and surface cooling on crack evolution, quantifies interface effects and fractal characteristics, and provides a theoretical basis for instability prediction of layered rock structures in low-temperature geotechnical engineering. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Applications of Fractal Dimensions in Rock Mechanics and Geomechanics)
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25 pages, 11231 KB  
Article
Uncertainty Quantification Analysis of Dynamic Responses in Plate Structures Based on a Physics-Informed CVAE Model
by Shujing Tang, Xuewen Yin and Wenwei Wu
Appl. Sci. 2026, 16(3), 1496; https://doi.org/10.3390/app16031496 - 2 Feb 2026
Viewed by 449
Abstract
The propagation of uncertainties in structural dynamic responses, arising from variations in material properties, geometry, and boundary conditions, is of critical concern to researchers in a variety of engineering instances. Conventional methods like high-fidelity Monte Carlo simulation are computationally prohibitive, while existing surrogate [...] Read more.
The propagation of uncertainties in structural dynamic responses, arising from variations in material properties, geometry, and boundary conditions, is of critical concern to researchers in a variety of engineering instances. Conventional methods like high-fidelity Monte Carlo simulation are computationally prohibitive, while existing surrogate models can improve efficiency at the expense of accuracy. To achieve a trade-off between accuracy and efficiency, a Physics-Informed Conditional Variational Autoencoder (PI-CVAE) model is proposed. It integrates a novel dual-branch encoder for time-frequency feature extraction, a learnable frequency-filtering decoder, and a holistic physics-informed loss function so as to enable efficient generation of dynamic responses with high accuracy and adequate physics consistency. Comprehensive numerical analysis of plate structures demonstrates that the proposed approach achieves remarkable accuracy (maximum FRF error < 0.2% and R2 > 0.99) and a computational speedup of 8–11 times in comparison with conventional simulation techniques. By maintaining high accuracy while efficiently propagating uncertainties, the PI-CVAE model provides a practical framework for probabilistic vibration analysis, especially during the acoustic design phase. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Machine Learning in Vibration and Acoustics (3rd Edition))
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15 pages, 4616 KB  
Article
Acoustic Absorption Behavior of Boards Made from Multilayer Packaging Waste
by Miron Rancea, Ovidiu Nemeș, Ancuța-Elena Tiuc and Ovidiu Vasile
Appl. Sci. 2026, 16(3), 1206; https://doi.org/10.3390/app16031206 - 24 Jan 2026
Viewed by 429
Abstract
The increasing amount of multilayer packaging waste poses significant environmental challenges and calls for sustainable valorization solutions. This study aimed to investigate the acoustic properties of composite materials produced by hot-pressing multilayer waste without the addition of binders or other substances. The waste [...] Read more.
The increasing amount of multilayer packaging waste poses significant environmental challenges and calls for sustainable valorization solutions. This study aimed to investigate the acoustic properties of composite materials produced by hot-pressing multilayer waste without the addition of binders or other substances. The waste was carefully cleaned and shredded into square or strip-like geometries, and the composite material plates were compressed at different temperatures (120 °C, 125 °C, 130 °C, 135 °C, and 140 °C) under a constant pressure of 5 MPa. The sound absorption coefficients were evaluated for representative samples, with results analyzed as a function of constituent geometry and processing temperature. Experimental results indicate that the pressing temperature critically affects the internal structure of the material, while waste shape exhibits a frequency-dependent influence on the absorption coefficient. The resulting composite materials display low porosity, which limits internal sound absorption and promotes sound wave reflection, indicating that these materials are more suitable for sound insulation rather than acoustic absorption. These results highlight the potential of multilayer packaging waste-based composites as a sustainable solution for noise control applications and highlight the importance of processing parameters in tailoring their acoustic performance. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Ecology Science and Engineering)
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17 pages, 1467 KB  
Article
Integrated Biomimetic 2D-LC and Permeapad® Assay for Profiling the Transdermal Diffusion of Pharmaceutical Compounds
by Ilaria Neri, Craig Stevens, Giacomo Russo and Lucia Grumetto
Molecules 2026, 31(2), 379; https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules31020379 - 21 Jan 2026
Viewed by 413
Abstract
A comprehensive two-dimensional liquid chromatography platform (LC × LC) was developed and validated for dermal permeability studies. In this implementation, the two separation dimensions were applied to mimic the layered structure of human skin: a ceramide-like stationary phase in the first dimension ( [...] Read more.
A comprehensive two-dimensional liquid chromatography platform (LC × LC) was developed and validated for dermal permeability studies. In this implementation, the two separation dimensions were applied to mimic the layered structure of human skin: a ceramide-like stationary phase in the first dimension (1D) to simulate the lipid-rich epidermis, and an immobilized artificial membrane (IAM) phase in the second (2D) to emulate the dermis. Experimental conditions were optimised to reflect the microenvironment of the in vivo skin. For validation purposes, 43 pharmaceutical and cosmetic compounds whose transdermal permeability coefficients (log Kp) were known from the scientific literature were selected as model solutes. A good degree of separation was achieved across the whole dataset, and affinity profiles correlated with transdermal passage properties, suggesting that retention within specific chromatographic ranges may be predictive of skin permeation. To complement this approach, mass diffusion measurements were also conducted using Permeapad® 96-well plates and LC was performed on a narrow bore column in MS-friendly conditions. These log Kp values were compared against both in vivo and chromatographic retention data. The combined use of these techniques offers a strategic framework for profiling new chemical entities for their dermal absorption in a manner that is both ethically compliant and eco-sustainable. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Developments in Chromatographic Applications in Medicine)
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