Dislocation Mechanics of Extremely High Rate Deformations in Iron and Tantalum

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American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)

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High strain rate simulations were performed using the multiscale dislocation dynamic plasticity (MDDP) method to calculate different rise times and load durations in mimicking high deformation rate shock or isentropic (ramp) testing of α-iron and tantalum crystals. The focus for both types of loading on both materials was on the inter-relationship between the (dislocation-velocity-related) strain rate sensitivity and the (time-dependent) evolution of dislocation density. The computations are compared with model thermal activation strain rate analysis (TASRA), phonon drag, and dislocation-generation predictions. The overall comparison of simulated tests and previous experimental measurements shows that the imposition of a rise time even as small as 0.2 ns preceding plastic relaxation via the MDDP method is indicative of relatively weak shock behavior. Copyright © 2021 by ASME.

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Constitutive relations, Mechanical behavior, Microstructure property relationships, Activation analysis, Iron, Shock testing, Shock waves, Strain rate, Dislocation dynamics, Dislocation mechanics, Dynamic plasticity, High-rate deformations, High-strain-rate, Microstructure-property relationships, Risetimes, Time duration, Tantalum

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