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Continuum shock mixture models for Ni+Al multilayers: Inert mesoscale simulations

Kittell, David E.; Specht, Paul E.; Abere, Michael J.; Potter, Kevin M.; Adams, David P.

Mesoscale modeling of shock waves in Ni+Al multilayers poses significant challenges that are due, in part, to shock-induced chemical reactions. Current modeling approaches utilize reactive molecular dynamics (MD), but they are limited to resolving domains of only a few hundred nanometers. In contrast, actual multilayer superlattices can be tens of micrometers thick, and they exhibit non-ideal (i.e., wavy) interfaces. The second part of our research builds upon previous work developing physically based, thermodynamically complete equations of state for various Ni and Al intermetallic compositions. Here, we introduce a novel workflow for high-fidelity mesoscale simulations of Ni+Al multilayers using a continuum hydrocode. By increasing the simulation domain size beyond MD limitations (e.g., 2 × 6 μm2) and incorporating explicit interfacial roughness, we investigate the shock response of Ni+Al multilayers at previously unexplored scales. Our experimental design encompasses nine multilayer geometries with varying roughness amplitudes and tilt angles (θ = 15°, 30°, and 45°), alongside 19 flyer impact velocities ranging from 0.3 to 3.0 km/s, resulting in a total of 171 high-fidelity simulations. The bulk shock state from inert 2D mesoscale simulations aligns with the law of mixtures, while temperature and pressure fluctuations strongly correlate with multilayer geometry types. A new metric dubbed the “hot spot probability integral” shows a greater dependence on a tilt angle than interfacial roughness.

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