CP620, Shock Compression of Condensed Matter - 2001 edited by M. D. Furnish, N. N. Thadhani, and Y. Horie © 2002 American Institute of Physics 0-7354-0068-7/02/$ 19.00 Al AND Cu DYNAMIC STRENGTH AT A STRAIN RATE OF 5-l(r8 s-1 M. Werdiger, S. Eliezer, E. Moshe, Z. Henis, E Dekel, Y. Horovitz and B. Arad Plasma Physics Department, Soreq NRC, Yavne, 81800, Israel. Abstract. Strain rates in the range (1.5-5)-10s s"1 were achieved in Al and Cu. A pico-second laser (20-100 ps) beam that was focused on thin foils, created shock waves in them. An optically recording velocity interferometer system (ORVIS) was used to measure the free-surface-velocity history by a nano-second laser. The spall strengths that were reached in the experiments are very close to the ultimate strength given by the EOS. INTRODUCTION metals. Mechanical properties of solids are controlled by lattice imperfections and dislocations, which weaken the materials. The usual spall process occurs due to the gathering and grouping of those imperfections. The hypothesis is, that at high strain rates (larger then 107 s"1), the process mentioned above does not have enough time to cause a spall, so that the atomic process remains the main spall-producing process. Therefore, under these conditions, the spall strength of metals should closely match the theoretically calculated values from the EOS. When a shock wave is reflected from the rear surface of a material, dynamic tensile stress is developed. If this stress exceeds the strength of the material, spallation occurs in a plain parallel to the rear surface (1-4). The experimental spall strength of metals at strain rates smaller than 106 s"1, differs from the theoretical value obtained by the equation of state, by as much as an order of magnitude. These differences are explained by the imperfection of the ImJ 10ns X=0.532 urn Grating FIGURE 1. A schematic description of the experimental setup 583 accelerated. The interference pattern was imaged by a cylindrical lens, to a set of bright points on the entrance slit of a streak camera. The interference pattern was analyzed with an image processing system, including a cooled charged-coupled device camera, a frame grabber and a PC. The time resolution of the experiments was 10 ps. Before performing each experiment, the oscillator of the main beam induced a hole in an aluminized Mylar foil that was mounted side by side with the target. Then the main and the diagnostic beams were aligned to coincide. Next, the target moved to the hole position and the experiment was executed. The trigger for the streak camera was taken from an avalanche photodiode that was located at the beginning of the main beam. A typical fringe pattern representing the free surface velocity in an experiment with a 100 ps, 31 mJ pulse focused onto a 10 urn thick aluminum target, is shown in Fig. 2. Time increases from left to right. The full time scale of this figure is 1.14 ns and the fringe constant is 0.872 km/s. The solid line denotes the free-surface velocity. Laser generated shock wave experiments, causing strain rates up to -5-108 s"1 on targets of aluminum and copper, have been performed. The results confirmed the hypothesis: at these strain rates, the experimental values indeed matched the theoretical ones. THE EXPERIMENTS The experimental setup is shown in fig. 1. A Nd:YAG oscillator-amplifier system yielding 20 ps pulses, with an output energy of 600 UJ per pulse, was used. This pulse was split, using a half wave plate and a polarizer. Part of the beam was left as it was, while the other part was stretched to duration of 100 ps, using a pair of gold gratings (1740 grooves/mm). Each partial beam was farther amplified, using a double pass Nd:glass amplifier, to yield final energies of 10-50 mJ per beam. This arrangement enabled us to switch alternately between 20 ps and 100 ps pulses. The laser beam was focused with a 50 cm focal length lens, to a spot diameter in the range of 60-400 |im. The laser intensity varied between 5-1011 and 3-1013 W/cm2. This main beam induced a shock wave in the target. The experiments were performed with Al and Cu targets 1-10 um thick. The pressure of the shock wave reaching the rear surface of the target was from tens up to hundreds of kilobars in aluminum, and up to 1.3 Mbar in copper. The velocity time evolution of the shocked material free surface was measured with an optically recording velocity interferometer system - ORVIS (5,6). The diagnostic system included a Continuum NY-80 oscillator, operating at 532nm, with pulse duration of 10 ns and energy of ImJ. This laser was focused to a spot diameter of 40 urn on the rear surface of the shocked target. The oscillator was synchronized with the main beam so that the two beams hit the target simultaneously from both sides. The light reflected from the moving free surface underwent a Doppler shift proportional to the velocity of the free surface. The light was collected, collimated and directed into a Michelson interferometer. The light leaving the interferometer produced an interference pattern of parallel fringes, which shifted when the rear surface of the target was FIGURE 2. The interference pattern and the free surface velocity deduced from it by the ORVIS in an experiment with a 10 |im thick aluminum foil, irradiated by a 100 ps, 31 mJ pulse. Time increases from left to right. The full time scale of fig. 1 is 1.14ns and the fringe constant is 0.872 km/s. RESULTS The velocity history of the moving rear surface ufs(t) was determined from the displacement y(t) of the interference pattern as a function of time t (5,6,7): 584 by the averaging effect over the various imperfections, e.g. voids, cracks etc. For aluminum, this logarithmic dependence seems to hold up to a strain rate of 108 s"1. From there on there is a quick rise toward the theoretical value. At a strain rate of 107 s"1 the averaging seems to become less affective, and to depend strongly on the local kind and density of the imperfections. y(t) U f s (t) = 4L e (n --)(! + 8) n (l) y(t) X is the diagnostic laser wavelength, Le is the length of the etalon, n is its index of refraction, c is the speed of light in vacuum, 8 is a correction term due to the wavelength dependence of the refractive index of the etalon material (7), d is the fringe spacing and v0 is termed the fringe constant. The spall pressure or the material strength is determined from the measurement of the free surface velocity time history. In the acoustic approximation the spall strength is (8,9,10): EOS&i«S 100- • S 8 ^ 60- 0 a 2 m 40- 50 'S cx U 0 rain) 1 T ai ^ a oa (2) a 'Ifc 20- CO *spall ~~ present experiments with 100 ps laser present experiments with 20 ps laser Fortovet. al. [ref. 11] Moshe et. al. [ref. 14] T 103 T » 104 YT 10s T TTT o D 107 106 108 10s Strain rate [sec" ] c0 is the sound velocity, p0 is the initial density of the target, umax is the peak velocity of the free surface, and umin is the first minimum in the free-surface velocity profile. The strain rate was calculated by: £= • Au 1 At 2c FIGURE 3. The spall strength as a function of the strain rate in aluminum. Cu EOS (3) Au is the velocity difference between the first maximum and the first minimum in the free surface velocity profile and At is the difference between the corresponding times. The spall strength as a function of the strain rate is shown in Fig. 3 for aluminum and in Fig. 4 for copper, together with the ultimate strength predicted by the EOS (see the next section). Additional data measured in experiments using impact of a projectile on a target (11,12) and in experiments of nanosecond laser induced shock waves (13,14) is also shown in figs. 3 and 4. A straight line can represent quite accurately the spall strength values in the figures, up to a strain rate of about 107 s"1. An almost linear relationship on a semi-log representation means a weak dependence. This weak dependence may be caused a 10* 10s JE, o 106 °i 107 108 109 Strain rate [sec ] FIGURE 4. The spall strength as a function of the strain rate in copper. Probably, this is also the reason for the large scattering of the data in that stain rate interval. Unfortunately, for copper, we do not have enough experimental data to follow the exact pattern. However, even from two experimental points, it is clear that above the strain rate value of 108 s"1, the experimental spall strength value 585 approaches the ultimate strength predicted by the EOS. REFERENCES DISCUSSION 1. Grady D.E., J. Mech. Phys, Solids 36, 353-384 (1988). 2. Bushman A.V., Kanel G.L, Ni A.L., Fortov V.E., Intense Dynamic Loading of Condensed Matter Taylor&Francis, London, 1993, Ch. 5,8. 3. Grady D.E., Kipp M.E., "Dynamic Fracture and Fragmentation" in High Pressure Shock Compression of Solids, edited by J.R. Asay and M. Shahinpoor , Springer-Verlag, New York, 1993, Ch.8. 4. Davison L., Grady D.E., Shahimpoor M. (Eds.), High Pressure Shock Compression of Solids II, Dynamic Fracture and Fragmentation, Springer-Verlag, New York, 1996. 5. Bloomquist D.D., Sheffield A.A., J. Appl. Phys, 54, 1717-1722(1983). 6. Moshe E., Dekel E., Henis Z., Eliezer S., Appl. Phys. Lett. 69, 1379- 1381 (1996). 7. Barker L.M., Schuler K.W., J. Appl. Phys. 45, 3692-3693 (1974). 8. Kanel G.L, Razorenov S.V., Utkin A.V., Fortov V.E., Baumung K., Karow K.U., Rush D., Licht V., J. Appl. Phys. 74, 7162-7165 (1993). 9. Kanel G.L, Razorenov S.V., Utkin A.V., in High-Pressure Shock Compression of Solids II, edited by Davison L., Grady D.E., Shahinpoor M., Springer-Verlag, New York, 1996, ch. 1. 10.Dekel E., Eliezer S., Henis Z., Moshe E., Ludmirsky A., Goldberg I.B., J. Appl. Phys. 84, 4851-4858 (1998). 11.Fortov V.E., Kostin V.V., Eliezer S., J. Appl. Phys. 70,4524-4531 (1991). 12.Kanel G.L, Razorenov S.V., Bogatch A, Utkin A.V., Fortov V.E., Grady D.E., J. Appl. Phys. 79, 8310-8317(1996). 13.Paisley D.L., Warmes R.H., Kopp R.A., "Laser driven flat plate impact to 100 Gpa with sub-nanosecond pulse duration and resolution for material property studies", in Shock waves in Condensed Matter, edited by Schmidt S.C., Dick R.D., Forbes J.W., Tasker D.G., Elsevier Science, New York, 1992, pp. 825-828. 14.Moshe E., Eliezer S., Dekel E., Ludmirsky A., Henis Z., Werdiger M., Goldberg I.B., Eliaz N., Eliezer D., J. Appl. Phys. 83, 4004-4011 (1998). 15.Moshe E., Eliezer S., Henis Z., Werdiger M., Dekel E., Horowitz Y., Maman S., Goldberg I.B., Eliezer D.,Appl. Phys. Lett. 76, 1555-1557-4011 (2000). The shock pressure near the rear surface of the target was estimated from the peak velocity of the free surface, umax. The particle velocity is given by: = umax/2 (4) The shock velocity and the pressure were determined by Hugoniot relations and the EOS. The EOS relation is: u s = c0 (5) where us is the shock velocity and a is a constant. The pressure is given by the Hugoniot relation P = p0usup (6) In the experiments reported here, the shock pressures near the rear surface were up to 430 kbar in aluminum and up to 1300 kbar in copper. The corresponding residual temperatures (on the release isentrope) as calculated by our EOS (14,15) were in the range (300-660) K in aluminum and (310-1340) K in copper. For these temperatures, the theoretical spall strength by the EOS is in the range (101-108) kbar in aluminum and (172-211) kbar in copper. These values are shown in figs. 3 and 4 as the EOS spall strength, together with the spall pressures (for aluminum and copper), as function of the strain rate. In the present experiments the highest measured spall strength is (80±10) kbar in aluminum and (156120) kbar in copper (the accuracy of the free surface velocity is 5%). These spall strengths measured in the experiments reported here, are very close to the ultimate strength given by the EOS. At strain rates larger than 108 s"1 the spall strength increases sharply towards its EOS value. The present experiments suggest that the ultimate strength will be achieved at a strain rate > 5-108 s"1. The generation of such high strain rates is possible due to the short loading time used in these experiments. 586
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