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1.
Phys Rev E ; 109(1-2): 015002, 2024 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38366536

RESUMO

Theoretical analysis of Richtmyer-Meshkov instability (RMI) experiments for solid strength shows that the strain rate for a given shock should be inversely proportional to the length scale of the sine wave perturbations when η_{0}k, the nondimensional amplitude to wavelength ratio, is held fixed. To isolate the effect of strain rate on strength, free-surface RMI specimens of annealed copper were prepared with three perturbation regions with the same η_{0}k but different length scales, characterized by the wavelength λ varying by a factor of 4.9 from 65 to 130 to 320µm. Three such targets with different fixed η_{0}k^{'}s were impacted to a shock pressure of 25 GPa, and the instability evolution was measured with photon Doppler velocimetry. Strengths estimated by comparing hydrocode simulation to the data increased from 700 to 1200 MPa as λ decreased. The different η_{0}k targets exercised increasing amounts of plastic strain yet showed no evidence of strain hardening. Physical regime sensitivity analysis determined that for 320-65µm wavelength perturbations, the effective strain rates increased from 8.7×10^{6} to 3.3×10^{7}s^{-1}, a factor of 3.8. Thus, the predicted strain rate scaling was mostly achieved but slightly suppressed by increased strength at higher rates. The RMI strength estimates were plotted against constitutive testing data on copper from the literature to show striking evidence of the strength upturn at higher strain rates.

2.
Phys Rev E ; 100(5-1): 053002, 2019 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31869927

RESUMO

Recently, Richtmyer-Meshkov instability (RMI) experiments driven by high explosives and fielded with perturbations on a free surface have been used to study strength at extreme strain rates and near zero pressure. The RMI experiments reported here used impact loading, which is experimentally simpler, more accurate to analyze, and which also allows the exploration of a wider range of conditions. Three experiments were performed on tantalum at shock stresses from 20 to 34 GPa, with six different perturbation sizes at each shock level, making this the most comprehensive set of strength-focused RMI experiments reported to date on any material. The resulting estimated average strengths of 1200-1400 MPa at strain rates of 10^{7}/s exceeded, by 40% or more, a common power law extrapolation from data at strain rates below 10^{4}/s. Taken together with other data in the literature that show much higher strength at simultaneous high rates and high pressure, these RMI data isolated effects and indicated that, in the range of conditions examined, the pressure effects are more significant than rate effects.

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