Behaviour of crystalline-amorphous interfaces in energetic aggregates subjected to coupled thermomechanical and laser loading

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Abstract

The behaviour of energetic aggregates was investigated for quasi-static compression and high strain rate thermomechanical compression behaviour that is coupled to laser irradiation. A dislocationdensity-based crystal plasticity formulation was used to represent energetic crystalline behaviour, a finite viscoelastic formulation was used for the polymer binder and a coupled electromagnetic (EM)-Thermomechanical computational scheme was used to predict aggregate response. Aggregates with different crystal sizes were considered to account for physically representative energetic microstructures and to understand the effects of crystal-crystal and crystal-binder interactions. The presence of smaller embedded crystals in the binder ligaments inhibited viscous sliding, and resulted in global hardening of the aggregate, which led to large stress gradients, localized plasticity and dislocation-density accumulation. The embedded crystals also increased scattering of the EM wave within the binder ligaments and increased the localization of EM energy and laser heat generation. Geometrically, necessary dislocation densities and stress gradients were calculated to characterize how hardening at the binder interfaces can lead to strengthening or defect nucleation.

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Brown, J. A., & Zikry, M. A. (2015). Behaviour of crystalline-amorphous interfaces in energetic aggregates subjected to coupled thermomechanical and laser loading. Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, 471(2184). https://doi.org/10.1098/rspa.2015.0548

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