Rapid Quantification of Dynamic and Spall Strength of Metals Across Strain Rates
Suhas Eswarappa Prameela, Christopher C. Walker, Christopher S., DiMarco, Debjoy D. Mallick, Xingsheng Sun, Stephanie Hernandez, Taisuke, Sasaki, Justin W. Wilkerson, K.T. Ramesh, George M. Pharr, Timothy P. Weihs

TL;DR
This paper introduces a combined nanoindentation and laser-driven micro-flyer shock testing framework to rapidly measure the dynamic and spall strength of metals, specifically magnesium alloys, across a wide range of strain rates, revealing new failure mechanisms.
Contribution
It presents a novel high-throughput testing approach that links microstructure modifications to dynamic strength and failure mechanisms at extreme strain rates.
Findings
Spall strength converges at high shock rates despite different failure mechanisms.
Peak aging leads to catastrophic failure under extreme strain rates.
Microstructure modulation affects strain rate sensitivity and dynamic strength.
Abstract
The response of metals and their microstructures under extreme dynamic conditions can be markedly different from that under quasistatic conditions. Traditionally, high strain rates and shock stresses are measured using cumbersome and expensive methods such as the Kolsky bar or large spall experiments. These methods are low throughput and do not facilitate high-fidelity microstructure-property linkages. In this work, we combine two powerful small-scale testing methods, custom nanoindentation, and laser-driven micro-flyer shock, to measure the dynamic and spall strength of metals. The nanoindentation system is configured to test samples from quasistatic to dynamic strain rate regimes (10 s to 10 s). The laser-driven micro-flyer shock system can test samples through impact loading between 10 s to 10 s strain rates, triggering spall…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMetal and Thin Film Mechanics · High-Velocity Impact and Material Behavior · Diamond and Carbon-based Materials Research
