17th Biennial International Conference of the APS Topical Group on Shock Compression of Condensed Matter
Volume 56, Number 6
Sunday–Friday, June 26–July 1 2011;
Chicago, Illinois
Session T3: High Pressure Strength IV
11:00 AM–12:30 PM,
Thursday, June 30, 2011
Room: Renaissance Ballroom AB
Chair: Stewart McWilliams, Carnegie Institute of Washington
Abstract ID: BAPS.2011.SHOCK.T3.1
Abstract: T3.00001 : Flow Strength of Shocked Aluminum in the Solid-Liquid Mixed Phase Region*
11:00 AM–11:30 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
William Reinhart
(Sandia National Laboratories)
Shock waves have been used to determine material properties under
high shock
stresses and very-high loading rates. The determination of
mechanical
properties such as compressive strength under shock compression
has proven
to be difficult and estimates of strength have been limited to
approximately
100 GPa or less in aluminum. The term ``strength'' has been used
in different
ways. For a Von-Mises solid, the yield strength is equal to twice
the shear
strength of the material and represents the maximum shear stress
that can be
supported before yield. Many of these concepts have been applied to
materials that undergo high strain-rate dynamic deformation, as
in uni-axial
strain shock experiments. In shock experiments, it has been
observed that
the shear stress in the shocked state is not equal to the shear
strength, as
evidenced by elastic recompressions in reshock experiments. This
has led to
an assumption that there is a yield surface with maximum
(loading)and
minimum (unloading), shear strength yet the actual shear stress lies
somewhere between these values.
This work provides the first simultaneous measurements of
unloading velocity
and flow strength for transition of solid aluminum to the liquid
phase. The
investigation describes the flow strength observed in 1100
(pure), 6061-T6,
and 2024 aluminum in the solid-liquid mixed phase region.
Reloading and
unloading techniques were utilized to provide independent data on
the two
unknowns ($\tau _{c}$ and $\tau _{o})$, so that the actual critical
shear strength and the shear stress at the shock state could be
estimated.
Three different observations indicate a change in material
response for
stresses of 100 to 160 GPa; 1) release wave speed (reloading where
applicable) measurements, 2) yield strength measurements, and 3)
estimates
of Poisson's ratio, all of which provide information on the melt
process
including internal consistency and/or non-equilibrium and
rate-dependent
melt behavior.
The study investigates the strength properties in the solid
region and as
the material transverses the solid-mixed- liquid regime. Differences
observed appear to be the product of alloying and/or microstructural
composition of the aluminum.
*Sandia is a multiprogram laboratory operated by Sandia Corporation, a Lockheed Martin Company, for the United States Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration under Contract DE-AC04-94AL85000.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2011.SHOCK.T3.1