Effects of Dynamic Material Strength on Hydrodynamic Instability and Damage Evolution in Shock Loaded Copper

Effects of Dynamic Material Strength on Hydrodynamic Instability and Damage Evolution in Shock Loaded Copper

Author: Sudrishti Gautam

Publisher:

Published: 2016

Total Pages: 133

ISBN-13:

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Characterization and modeling of deformation and failure in metallic materials under extreme conditions, such as the high loads and strain rates found under shock loading due to explosive detonation and high velocity-impacts, are extremely important for a wide variety of military and industrial applications. When a shock wave causes stress in a material that exceeds the elastic limit, plasticity and eventually spallation occur in the material. The process of spall fracture, which in ductile materials stems from strain localization, void nucleation, growth and coalescence, can be caused by microstructural heterogeneity. The analysis of void nucleation performed from a microstructurally explicit simulation of a spall damage evolution in a multicrystalline copper indicated triple junctions as the preferred sites for incipient damage nucleation revealing 75% of them with at least two grain boundaries with misorientation angle between 20-55°. The analysis suggested the nature of the boundaries connecting at a triple junction is an indicator of their tendency to localize spall damage. The results also showed that damage propagated preferentially into one of the high angle boundaries after voids nucleate at triple junctions. Recently the Rayleigh-Taylor Instability (RTI) and the Richtmyer-Meshkov Instability (RMI) have been used to deduce dynamic material strength at very high pressures and strain rates. The RMI is used in this work since it allows using precise diagnostics such as Transient Imaging Displacement Interferometry (TIDI) due to its slower linear growth rate. The Preston-Tonks-Wallace (PTW) model is used to study the effects of dynamic strength on the behavior of samples with a fed-thru RMI, induced via direct laser drive on a perturbed surface, on stability of the shock front and the dynamic evolution of the amplitudes and velocities of the perturbation imprinted on the back (flat) surface by the perturbed shock front. Simulation results clearly showed that the amplitude of the hydrodynamic instability increases with a decrease in strength and vice versa and that the amplitude of the perturbed shock front produced by the fed-thru RMI is also affected by strength in the same way, which provides an alternative to amplitude measurements to study strength effects under dynamic conditions. Simulation results also indicate the presence of second harmonics in the surface perturbation after a certain time, which were also affected by the material strength.


Microstructural Evolution During Dynamic Deformation of Cubic Metals

Microstructural Evolution During Dynamic Deformation of Cubic Metals

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 2010

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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Shockwave shape can influence dynamic damage evolution. Features such as rise time, pulse duration, peak shock pressure, pull back, and release rate are influenced as wave shape changes. However, their individual influence on dynamic damage evolution is not well understood. Specifically, changing from a square to triangular or Taylor wave loading profile can alter the release kinetics from peak shock pressure and the volume of material sampled during release. This creates a spatial influence. In high purity metals, because damage is often linked to boundaries within the microstructure (grain or twin), changing the volume of material sampled during release, can have a drastic influence on dynamic damage evolution as the number of boundaries or defects sampled is altered. In this study, model-driven dynamic experiments have been conducted on eu with four different grain sizes to examine, for a given shockwave shape, how the spatial effect of boundary distribution influences dynamic damage evolution. Both two and three dimensional damage characterization techniques have been utilized. This study shows the critical influence of spatial effects, in this case boundary density, on dynamic damage evolution. As the boundary density decreases, the damage evolution transitions from nucleation controlled to growth controlled. It also shows that specific boundaries, those with high Schmid factor orientations on either side, maybe a necessary condition for void formation.


Dynamic Damage and Fragmentation

Dynamic Damage and Fragmentation

Author: David Edward Lambert

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2019-01-03

Total Pages: 462

ISBN-13: 1119579147

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Engineering structures may be subjected to extreme high-rate loading conditions, like those associated with natural disasters (earthquakes, tsunamis, rock falls, etc.) or those of anthropic origin (impacts, fluid–structure interactions, shock wave transmissions, etc.). Characterization and modeling of the mechanical behavior of materials under these environments is important in predicting the response of structures and improving designs. This book gathers contributions by eminent researchers in academia and government research laboratories on the latest advances in the understanding of the dynamic process of damage, cracking and fragmentation. It allows the reader to develop an understanding of the key features of the dynamic mechanical behavior of brittle (e.g. granular and cementitious), heterogeneous (e.g. energetic) and ductile (e.g. metallic) materials.


Influence of Loading Rate on the Mechanical Response and Substructure Evolution of Shock-loaded Copper

Influence of Loading Rate on the Mechanical Response and Substructure Evolution of Shock-loaded Copper

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 1991

Total Pages: 7

ISBN-13:

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Shock recovery experiments on copper have been conducted to investigate the influence of loading rate and stress amplitude on defect storage and post-shock mechanical properties. The shock risetimes varied approximately from one nanosecond for the shock experiments to one microsecond for quasi-isentropic loading experiments. All the experiments had the same peak pressure and pulse duration. Decreasing the strain-rate of loading is shown to increase both the defect storage and post-shock yield strength of copper. The effect of loading rate on post-shock substructure and mechanical response of impacted copper is postulated to be directly related to the amount of dislocation motion before interaction with other dislocations and to the amount of reversible dislocation motion and resultant annihilation during the rarefaction portion of the shock-release cycle. 10 refs., 5 figs.


Effects of Loading Kinetics on the Shock Response of Polycrystalline Copper

Effects of Loading Kinetics on the Shock Response of Polycrystalline Copper

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 2012

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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The effects of loading kinetics on the damage evolution in high purity copper samples are summarized as follows: The combination of the energy supplied by the shock impulse (peak stress) and the time spent in it dissipation seem to be responsible for the characteristics of the damage fields. For an increasing coupled parameter of energy*time, more damage was predicted, as well as experimentally observed; As more energy (higher peak stress) was dissipated for longer periods of time (lower decompression rate), the damage fields evolved from early stages of damage, in the form of void nucleation and initial void growth, to the later stages of void coalescence.