Title of article :
Research trends in ice mechanics
Author/Authors :
John P. Dempsey، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Abstract :
In sea ice geophysics, the formulation and implementation of a continuum anisotropic ice dynamics model is
required in order to increase the spatial resolution of the Polar Ice Prediction System (PIPS) used by the National/
Naval Ice Center to provide sea-ice analyses, forecasts, outlooks and ship-routing recommendations within the
marginal ice zone of Arctic and Antarctic seas. Currently, too little is known about the formation of leads in the
Arctic, a situation that should rapidly improve via automated ice-tracking SAR algorithms. Many questions remain
concerning the in¯uences of inhomogeneities (thermal cracks, ridges, thickness variability, and rubble) on wave
propagation, constitutive behavior and overall ice strength at various scales. Floe scale ice models appear to oer
the means to bridge the scales between geophysical and structural applications by being able to accurately model the
mechanics of ridging, rafting and leading. At the scale of ice forces on structures and ships, a diverse range of creep-
brittle failure modes awaits incorporation into ice force models. Knowledge concerning the multiaxial compressive
failure of freshwater and saline ice is now available. The constitutive modeling of sea ice lags well behind that for
freshwater ice. The important issues of scale eects and inhomogeneities on tensile strength at lab- to structural-
scale are discussed, as are the links between various scale
Keywords :
Rafting , Breakup , Waves , Ice forces , Fracture , Ice dynamics , Tensile , Geophysical scale , Structural scale , Leads , Ridges , Ice-structure interaction , Ships , ce mechanics , Compressive , Floe scale , Multiaxial , grain boundary sliding
Journal title :
International Journal of Solids and Structures
Journal title :
International Journal of Solids and Structures