Understanding the behavior of concrete and mortar at very high strain rates is of critical importance in a range of applications. Under highly dynamic conditions, the strain-rate dependence of material response and high levels of hydrostatic pressure cause the material behavior to be significantly d
High strain rate fragmentation of liquid systems at atmospheric pressure
β Scribed by J.P. Borg; T.J. Downs; A. Lloyd
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 801 KB
- Volume
- 33
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0734-743X
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β¦ Synopsis
The fragmentation characteristics of liquid systems at atmospheric pressure has been investigated experimentally and compared to hydrodynamic calculations as well as theoretical predictions. The geometry is a one-dimensional (1-D) nylon flat plate impacting a flat plate liquid system at velocities of approximately 0.3 km/s. The experiments were conducted at the Marquette University's gas gun facility. Hydrocodes calculations were used to investigate early time shock evolution, material deformation and strain rate. High-speed photography and witness cards were used to capture the impact and fragmentation event as well as drop distributions. The experimental drop distributions are compared to distributions obtained from a Grady-Kipp (GK) fragmentation model. The liquid spall GK fragmentation model predicted the correct median drop size while the flow stress spall over predicted the median drop size. The standard GK Poisson drop distribution superimposed over the median drop size produces a distribution which is wider than the data obtained.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The response of concrete and mortar under high-strain-rate impact loading are analyzed using fully dynamic finite element simulations. The analyses concern the load-carrying capacity, energy absorbency and the effect of the microstructure. The simulations focus on the plate impact configuration used