2005 APS March Meeting
Monday–Friday, March 21–25, 2005;
Los Angeles, CA
Session D11: Focus Session: Simulations of Matter at Extreme Conditions I
2:30 PM–5:42 PM,
Monday, March 21, 2005
LACC
Room: 153C
Sponsoring
Units:
DCOMP DMP GSCCM
Chair: Carter White, Naval Research Lab
Abstract ID: BAPS.2005.MAR.D11.1
Abstract: D11.00001 : Atomistic and mesoscale modeling of mechanical and chemical processes in energetic materials
2:30 PM–3:06 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Alejandro Strachan
(Los Alamos National Laboratory)
New-generation reactive interatomic potentials with molecular dynamics
enable the full-physics, full-chemistry description complex thermal,
mechanical, and chemical process in a wide variety of materials. I will
describe the use of the first principles-based reactive force field ReaxFF
to describe shock and thermal induced decomposition of various molecular
energetic materials, including PETN, RDX, TATB and nitromethane.
Non-equilibrium shock simulations enable the characterization of the initial
chemical events under dynamical loading while equilibrium simulations at
various temperatures and densities enable us to study phenomena at longer
time-scales and follow the reactions to completion. These simulations
provide information not only about chemical rates but also a molecular-level
understanding of the complex multi-molecular chemistry involved.
Furthermore, we find that decomposition time-scales of various materials
have a strong correlation with their intrinsic sensitivity to ignition.
While providing a very detailed description, all-atom MD simulations are
computationally too intensive to simulate many important processes in
molecularly complex materials such as shockwaves. Thus, we have recently
developed a new mesodynamical method (where a single particle describes
groups of atoms) that enables a thermodynamically accurate description of
energy transfer between mesoparticles (molecules in this case) and their
internal degrees of freedom. We describe the thermal role of the internal
degrees of freedom of each mesoparticle using local, finite thermostats that
are coupled to the local energy of the mesoparticles. The parameters
entering the mesoscopic description can be obtained from all-atom
simulations. We exemplify the new method via shock simulations of the
crystalline polymer poly(vinylidene fluoride); the mesodynamics results are
in excellent agreement with all-atom MD simulations.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2005.MAR.D11.1