TY - JOUR
T1 - Critical assessment of the extreme mechanical behavior of a stable nanocrystalline alloy under shock loading
AU - Hornbuckle, B. C.
AU - Turnage, S. A.
AU - Williams, C. L.
AU - Giri, A. K.
AU - Casem, D.
AU - Solanki, K.
AU - Darling, K. A.
N1 - Funding Information: The authors acknowledge A.J Roberts and T. Luckenbaugh for the synthesis of the Cu-Ta powder; T. Luckenbaugh, S. Marsh, and M.C. Aniska for consolidation of the Cu-Ta powder and machining. Also, the authors are grateful to E. Wilson, D. Ayers, and J. Bradley for their support in conducting the shock experiments. K.S. acknowledges the Support of the DEVCOM Army Research Laboratory and the National Science Foundation under contracts W911NF-15-2-0038 and 1663287 . The authors would also like to thank Prof. Naresh Thadhani from Georgia Tech for very insightful conversations and suggestions related to the content of this paper. Publisher Copyright: © 2022
PY - 2022/9/1
Y1 - 2022/9/1
N2 - A material's spall-strength and Hugoniot elastic limit (HEL), are measures of its ability to resist failure and plastic deformation under shock loading. An ideal single-crystal, i.e., a defect-free material, offers perfect lattice rectification, and therefore, provides an upper bound, or expected limit, which has yet to be exceeded by their polycrystalline counterparts. Toward this, we used a nanocrystalline (NC) copper-tantalum alloy, a model system, to probe the HEL and the spall strength of a stable NC alloy and the pertaining microstructural features that control failure. The results reveal significant increases in the HEL to about 2.0 GPa and spall strength of 1.19–1.67 GPa compared to polycrystalline Cu along with negligible changes in the residual hardness and microstructure of the shock recovered samples. The observed spall strength is approximately 2-times that of polycrystalline Cu. Further, advanced microstructural characterization using transmission electron microscopy (TEM) found no increase in dislocation density and/or mechanical twinning between the as-received and shock recovered samples, i.e., stabilized NC-alloys exhibit an unprecedented ability to resist high defect (such as dislocation) accumulation and damage. This anomalous behavior in stable NC-alloys is attributed to the elimination/limitation of defects formed under shock conditions coupled with a divergent strain-rate-insensitive behavior of its main microstructural features. The present work highlights, if designed properly, that some critical lower length-scale features including grain and phase boundaries may not contribute to the failure process. However, more fundamental research is needed to address the role processing parameters have on the resultant material that could result in spall strengths comparable to those attained for single crystals.
AB - A material's spall-strength and Hugoniot elastic limit (HEL), are measures of its ability to resist failure and plastic deformation under shock loading. An ideal single-crystal, i.e., a defect-free material, offers perfect lattice rectification, and therefore, provides an upper bound, or expected limit, which has yet to be exceeded by their polycrystalline counterparts. Toward this, we used a nanocrystalline (NC) copper-tantalum alloy, a model system, to probe the HEL and the spall strength of a stable NC alloy and the pertaining microstructural features that control failure. The results reveal significant increases in the HEL to about 2.0 GPa and spall strength of 1.19–1.67 GPa compared to polycrystalline Cu along with negligible changes in the residual hardness and microstructure of the shock recovered samples. The observed spall strength is approximately 2-times that of polycrystalline Cu. Further, advanced microstructural characterization using transmission electron microscopy (TEM) found no increase in dislocation density and/or mechanical twinning between the as-received and shock recovered samples, i.e., stabilized NC-alloys exhibit an unprecedented ability to resist high defect (such as dislocation) accumulation and damage. This anomalous behavior in stable NC-alloys is attributed to the elimination/limitation of defects formed under shock conditions coupled with a divergent strain-rate-insensitive behavior of its main microstructural features. The present work highlights, if designed properly, that some critical lower length-scale features including grain and phase boundaries may not contribute to the failure process. However, more fundamental research is needed to address the role processing parameters have on the resultant material that could result in spall strengths comparable to those attained for single crystals.
KW - Cu-Ta
KW - Interfaces and defects
KW - Nanocrystalline alloys
KW - TEM
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U2 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actamat.2022.118105
DO - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actamat.2022.118105
M3 - Article
SN - 1359-6454
VL - 236
JO - Acta Materialia
JF - Acta Materialia
M1 - 118105
ER -