Who's Who in
Engineering Academia

    James Hambleton

  • Assistant Professor
  • James Hambleton
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  • Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering
  • https://www.mccormick.northwestern.edu/civil-environmental/p...
  • Northwestern University
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  • 633 Clark St
    Evanston, Illinois 60208
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  • Contact by e-mail?
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  • Dr. Hambleton’s main research interests are in computational plasticity, geotechnical analysis, contact mechanics, soil-machine interaction, and the analysis of problems involving unsteady plastic flow. A major focal point of his work over the coming years is to advance the understanding of how soils are moved and shaped through interaction with man-made objects and machinery. The overarching goal of these activities is to develop rigorous, mechanics-based models for predicting soil deformation and the corresponding force requirements or reactions. From a theoretical perspective, problems involving soil-machine interaction pose a tremendous challenge due to the confluence of unsteady plastic flow, potentially three-dimensional deformation, contact interaction, material instabilities, and rate effects from inertial forces and hydromechanical coupling (for saturated or partially saturated soils). This work endeavors to discover new modelling paradigms to help establish accurate, robust, and efficient computational methods. From a practical viewpoint, the scale of operations involving soil-machine interaction across the face of the Earth is difficult to fathom. For housing excavations, mineral production, and road building alone, each individual moves several tons of earth each year when distributed evenly across the world’s population. Breakthroughs in understanding will therefore have profound long-term effects with respect to reducing costs and production times, as well as mitigating consumption and pollution.

    Dr. Hambleton’s specific areas of interest include

    • plowing (ploughing) and cutting of soils and rocks in earthmoving operations,

    • installation processes for screw anchors and screw foundations,

    • penetration-based testing for in situ characterization of soil strength and deformability, and

    • soil-wheel interaction for off-road vehicles.
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