Abstract
While the field of shock-wave physics has provided significant insights into many of the processes related to wave propagation in materials, the exact operative micromechanisms of defect generation occurring during the shock and thereafter those controlling defect storage and damage evolution remain incompletely understood and poorly modeled. Attainment of a truly predictive capability to enable accurate simulations of dynamic impact, shock, and high-rate loading phenomena applications requires a linked experimental, modeling, and validation research program. In this talk an overview of the microstructural mechanisms affecting the strength of materials at high pressure and strain rates as well as the processes controlling damage evolution during shock loading will be reviewed. The spectrum of physical phenomena and the potential nation-wide experimental facilities poised to study them is discussed. In addition, the limitations and caveats involved in using only velocimetry, single-pass radiography, and/or shock recovery alone to elucidate the 3-D aspects of defect generation, storage, and recovery will be examined in detail. Examples of how both "real-time" and post-mortem experimental approaches are needed to quantify dislocation / defect generation, shock-induced phase transitions, and damage evolution and spallation will be discussed. © 2012 American Institute of Physics.
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Gray, G. T. (2012). Material response to shock/dynamic loading: Windows into kinetic and stress-state effects on defect generation and damage evolution. In AIP Conference Proceedings (Vol. 1426, pp. 19–26). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.3686214
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