Iridium alloys have been utilized as structural materials for certain high-temperature applications due to their superior strength and ductility at elevated temperatures. In some applications where the iridium alloys are subjected to high-temperature and high-speed impact simultaneously, the high-temperature high-strain-rate mechanical properties of the iridium alloys must be fully characterized to understand the mechanical response of the components in these severe applications. In this study, the room-temperature Kolsky tension bar was modified to characterize a DOP-26 iridium alloy in tension at elevated strain rates and temperatures. The modifications include (1) a unique cooling system to cool down the bars while the specimen was heated to high temperatures with an induction heater; (2) a small-force pre-tension system to compensate for the effect of thermal expansion in the high-temperature tensile specimen; (3) a laser system to directly measure the displacements at both ends of the tensile specimen independently; and (4) a pair of high-sensitivity semiconductor strain gages to measure the weak transmitted force. The dynamic high-temperature tensile stress-strain curves of the iridium alloy were experimentally obtained with the modified high-temperature Kolsky tension bar techniques at two different strain rates (~1000 and 3000 s-1) and temperatures (~750 and 1030 °C).
CITATION STYLE
Song, B., Nelson, K., Lipinski, R., Bignell, J., Ulrich, G. B., & George, E. P. (2016). Dynamic high-temperature tensile characterization of an iridium alloy. In Conference Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Mechanics Series (Vol. 85, pp. 141–147). Springer New York LLC. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-22452-7_20
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