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A Method for Studying the Temperature Dependence of Dynamic Fracture and Fragmentation
- Source :
- Journal of Visualized Experiments.
- Publication Year :
- 2015
- Publisher :
- MyJove Corporation, 2015.
-
Abstract
- The dynamic fracture of a body is a late-stage phenomenon typically studied under simplified conditions, in which a sample is deformed under uniform stress and strain rate. This can be produced by evenly loading the inner surface of a cylinder. Due to the axial symmetry, as the cylinder expands the wall is placed into a tensile hoop stress that is uniform around the circumference. While there are various techniques to generate this expansion such as explosives, electromagnetic drive, and existing gas gun techniques they are all limited in the fact that the sample cylinder must be at room temperature. We present a new method using a gas gun that facilitates experiments on cylinders from 150 K to 800 K with a consistent, repeatable loading. These highly diagnosed experiments are used to examine the effect of temperature on the fracture mechanisms responsible for failure, and their resulting influence on fragmentation statistics. The experimental geometry employs a steel ogive located inside the target cylinder, with the tip located about halfway in. A single stage light gas gun is then used to launch a polycarbonate projectile into the cylinder at 1,000 m/sec(-1). The projectile impacts and flows around the rigid ogive, driving the sample cylinder from the inside. The use of a non-deforming ogive insert allows us to install temperature control hardware inside the rear of the cylinder. Liquid nitrogen (LN₂) is used for cooling and a resistive high current load for heating. Multiple channels of upshifted photon Doppler velocimetry (PDV) track the expansion velocity along the cylinder enabling direct comparison to computer simulations, while High speed imaging is used to measure the strain to failure. The recovered cylinder fragments are also subject to optical and electron microscopy to ascertain the failure mechanism.
- Subjects :
- Materials science
General Chemical Engineering
Explosions
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
law.invention
Cylinder (engine)
Engineering
law
Fragmentation
Light-gas gun
Materials Testing
High Strain Rate
Ti-6Al-4V
Shock Physics
Temperature control
Science & Technology
General Immunology and Microbiology
Projectile
General Neuroscience
Stress–strain curve
Temperature
Expanding Cylinder
Mechanics
Ogive
Multidisciplinary Sciences
Issue 100
Fracture
Cylinder stress
Science & Technology - Other Topics
Axial symmetry
BEHAVIOR
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 1940087X
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Visualized Experiments
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....93e68c687dc05537783872d860a22e50
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.3791/52463-v