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Dynamic response of additively manufactured Ti-5Al-5V-5Mo-3Cr as a function of heat treatment

Journal of Applied Physics

Specht, Paul E.; Ruggles, Timothy; Miers, John C.; Moore, David G.; Brown, Nathan P.; Duwal, Sakun; Branch, Brittany A.

Both shock and shockless compression experiments were performed on laser powder bed fusion (LPBF) Ti-5Al-5V-5Mo-3Cr (Ti-5553) to peak compressive stresses near 15 GPa. Experiments were performed on the as-built material, containing a purely β (body centered cubic) microstructure, and two differing heat treatments resulting in a dual phase α (hexagonal close packed) and β microstructure. The Hugoniot, Hugoniot elastic limit (HEL), and spallation strength were measured and compared to wrought Ti-6Al-4V (Ti-64). The results indicate the LPBF Ti-5553 Hugoniot response is similar between heat treatments and to Ti-64. The HEL stress observed in the LPBF Ti-5553 was considerably higher than Ti-64, with the as-built, fully β alloy exhibiting the largest values. The spallation strength of the LPBF Ti-5553 was also similar to Ti-64. Clear evidence of initial porosity serving as initiation sites for spallation damage was observed when comparing computed tomography measurements before and after loading. Post-mortem scanning electron microscopy images of the recovered spallation samples showed no evidence of retained phase changes near the spall plane. The spall plane was found to have kinks aligned with the loading direction near areas with large concentrations of twin-like, crystallographic defects in the as-built condition. For the heat-treated samples, the concentrations of twin-like, crystallographic defects were absent, and no preference for failure at the interface between the α and β phases was observed.

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Understanding Phase and Interfacial Effects of Spall Fracture in Additively Manufactured Ti-5Al-5V-5Mo-3Cr

Branch, Brittany A.; Ruggles, Timothy; Miers, John C.; Massey, Caroline E.; Moore, David G.; Brown, Nathan; Duwal, Sakun; Silling, Stewart; Mitchell, John A.; Specht, Paul E.

Additive manufactured Ti-5Al-5V-5Mo-3Cr (Ti-5553) is being considered as an AM repair material for engineering applications because of its superior strength properties compared to other titanium alloys. Here, we describe the failure mechanisms observed through computed tomography, electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD), and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) of spall damage as a result of tensile failure in as-built and annealed Ti-5553. We also investigate the phase stability in native powder, as-built and annealed Ti-5553 through diamond anvil cell (DAC) and ramp compression experiments. We then explore the effect of tensile loading on a sample containing an interface between a Ti-6Al-V4 (Ti-64) baseplate and additively manufactured Ti-5553 layer. Post-mortem materials characterization showed spallation occurred in regions of initial porosity and the interface provides a nucleation site for spall damage below the spall strength of Ti-5553. Preliminary peridynamics modeling of the dynamic experiments is described. Finally, we discuss further development of Stochastic Parallel PARticle Kinteic Simulator (SPPARKS) Monte Carlo (MC) capabilities to include the integration of alpha (α)-phase and microstructural simulations for this multiphase titanium alloy.

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Impact Response of Control Atmosphere Plasma Spray Deposited Materials

Branch, Brittany A.; Mccoy, Chad A.; Vackel, Andrew

Thermal spray processing of metals and respective blends is becoming increasingly attractive due to the unique properties such as increased yield strength, low ductility, and differences in tensile and compressive strengths that result from microstructural features due to the spray process compared to other additive manufacturing methods. Here we report the results of plate impact experiments applied to Controlled Atmosphere Plasma Spray deposits of tantalum (Ta), niobium (Nb), and a tantalum-niobium blend (TaNb). These methods allowed for definition of the Hugoniot for each material type and the assessment of the Hugoniot Elastic Limit (HEL). Spallation experiments were conducted, and soft recovery of each material type allowed for scanning electron microscopy to characterize the fracture mechanism during tensile loading.

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Transmitted wave measurements in cold sprayed materials under dynamic compression

Mccoy, Chad A.; Branch, Brittany A.; Vackel, Andrew

Spray-formed materials have complex microstructures which pose challenges for microscale and mesoscale modeling. To constrain these models, experimental measurements of wave profiles when subjecting the material to dynamic compression are necessary. The use of a gas gun to launch a shock into a material is a traditional method to understand wave propagation and provide information of time-dependent stress variations due to complex microstructures. This data contains information on wave reverberations within a material and provides a boundary condition for simulation. Here we present measurements of the wavespeed and wave profile at the rear surface of tantalum, niobium, and a tantalum/niobium blend subjected to plate impact. Measurements of the Hugoniot elastic limit are compared to previous work and wavespeeds are compared to longitudinal sound velocity measurements to examine wave damping due to the porous microstructure.

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Multimode Metastructures: Novel Hybrid 3D Lattice Topologies

Boyce, Brad L.; Garland, Anthony; White, Benjamin C.; Jared, Bradley H.; Conway, Kaitlynn; Adstedt, Katerina; Dingreville, Remi; Robbins, Joshua; Walsh, Timothy; Alvis, Timothy; Branch, Brittany A.; Kaehr, Bryan J.; Kunka, Cody; Leathe, Nicholas S.

With the rapid proliferation of additive manufacturing and 3D printing technologies, architected cellular solids including truss-like 3D lattice topologies offer the opportunity to program the effective material response through topological design at the mesoscale. The present report summarizes several of the key findings from a 3-year Laboratory Directed Research and Development Program. The program set out to explore novel lattice topologies that can be designed to control, redirect, or dissipate energy from one or multiple insult environments relevant to Sandia missions, including crush, shock/impact, vibration, thermal, etc. In the first 4 sections, we document four novel lattice topologies stemming from this study: coulombic lattices, multi-morphology lattices, interpenetrating lattices, and pore-modified gyroid cellular solids, each with unique properties that had not been achieved by existing cellular/lattice metamaterials. The fifth section explores how unintentional lattice imperfections stemming from the manufacturing process, primarily sur face roughness in the case of laser powder bed fusion, serve to cause stochastic response but that in some cases such as elastic response the stochastic behavior is homogenized through the adoption of lattices. In the sixth section we explore a novel neural network screening process that allows such stocastic variability to be predicted. In the last three sections, we explore considerations of computational design of lattices. Specifically, in section 7 using a novel generative optimization scheme to design novel pareto-optimal lattices for multi-objective environments. In section 8, we use computational design to optimize a metallic lattice structure to absorb impact energy for a 1000 ft/s impact. And in section 9, we develop a modified micromorphic continuum model to solve wave propagation problems in lattices efficiently.

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Transient Deformation in Additively Manufactured 316L Stainless Steel Lattices Characterized with in-situ X-ray Phase Contrast Imaging: The Complete Dataset for Three Geometrical Lattices

Branch, Brittany A.; Specht, Paul E.; Jensen, Scott; Jared, Bradley H.

Metallic lattice structures are being considered for shock mitigation applications due to their superior mechanical properties, energy absorption capability and lightweight characteristics inherent of the additive manufacturing process. In this study, shock compression experiments coupled to x-ray phase contrast imaging (PCI) were conducted on 316L stainless steel lattices. Meso-scale simulations incorporating the as-built lattice structure characterized by computed tomography were used to simulate PCI radiographs in CTH for direct comparison to experimental data. The methodology presented here offers robust validation for constitutive properties to further our understanding of lattice compaction at application-relevant strain rates.

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Directional shock diode behavior through the interaction of geometric voids in engineered polymer assemblies

Journal of Applied Physics

Branch, Brittany A.; Frank, Geoff; Abbott, Andrew; Lacina, David; Dattelbaum, Dana M.; Neel, Christopher; Spowart, Jonathan

With the advent of additive manufacturing (AM) techniques, a new class of shockwave mitigation and structural supports has been realized through the hierarchical assembly of polymer materials. To date, there have been a limited number of studies investigating the role of structure on shockwave localization and whether AM offers a means to tailor shockwave behavior. Of particular interest is whether the mesoscopic structure can be tailored to achieve shockwave properties in one direction of impact vs the other. Here, we illustrate directional response in engineered polymer foams. In situ time-resolved x-ray phase contrast imaging at the Advanced Photon Source was used to characterize these diode-like structures. This work offers a breakthrough in materials technology for the development of protective structures that require augmentation of shock in one direction while diminishing transmission in the opposite direction.

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Investigating shock melting of metals through time-resolved x-ray diffraction of cerium

Journal of Applied Physics

Beason, M.T.; Jensen, B.J.; Branch, Brittany A.

Time-resolved x-ray diffraction (XRD) was used to examine the behavior of Ce under shock loading to stress states up to 22 GPa that span the shock-melt transition. Experiments reported here observed Ce held at a steady state for ∼500 ns prior to being uniaxially released to ambient pressure. Time-resolved XRD shows a constant diffraction pattern over the duration of the steady state with rapid solidification occurring on release. Cerium was found to remain crystalline as Poisson's ratio (ν) increases in the α-phase with incipient melt observed in XRD once ν reaches 0.5. Diffraction results along with sound speed measurements limit melt completion to be between 12 and 14 GPa, significantly lower than previously expected. The XRD results add confidence to previous methods used to define incipient melt and help to define a method to constrain the melt region along the Hugoniot independent of a light source.

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Impact Response of Cold Spray Deposited Materials

Branch, Brittany A.; Mccoy, Chad A.; Vackel, Andrew

Solid-state cold spraying (CS) of metals and respective blends is becoming increasingly attractive compared to conventional high temperature processes due to the unique properties such as increased yield strength, low ductility, and differences in tensile and compressive strengths that result from microstructural features due to the CS process. Here we report the results of plate impact experiments applied to CS deposits of tantalum (Ta), niobium (Nb), and a tantalum- niobium blend (TaNb). These methods allowed for definition of the Hugoniot for each material type and allowed for assessment of the Hugoniot Elastic Limit (HEL). Scanning electron microscopy was used on recovered samples to characterize the fracture mechanism during spallation.

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Impact of filler composition on mechanical and dynamic response of 3-D printed silicone-based nanocomposite elastomers

Composites Science and Technology

Talley, Samantha J.; Branch, Brittany A.; Welch, Cynthia F.; Park, Chi H.; Watt, John; Kuettner, Lindsey; Patterson, Brian; Dattelbaum, Dana M.; Lee, Kwan S.

Cellular silicone reinforced with silica filler prepared using additive manufacturing (AM) have been used widely for vibrational damping and shockwave mitigation. The two most commonly printed cellular silicone structures, simple cubic (SC) and face-centered tetragonal (FCT) display distinctly different static and dynamic mechanical responses dependent upon structure. In this work, the relationship between filler size and composition with mechanical response is investigated using polydimethylsiloxane-based silicones filled with aluminum oxide, graphite, or titanium dioxide. SC and FCT structures of porous, periodic silicone pads were printed using new direct ink write (DIW) resin formulations containing up to 25 wt% of functional filler (TiO2, Al2O3, or graphite). All AM pads were characterized using mechanical techniques (DMA, compression). Dynamic compression experiments coupled with time-resolved X-ray phase contrast imaging were performed to obtain insights into role of filler interactions in the in situ evolution of shockwave coupling in these functional, periodic porous polymers.

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Understanding Microstructural Effects on Dynamic Performance Towards the Development of Shock Metamaterials

Branch, Brittany A.; Specht, Paul E.; Ruggles, Timothy; Moore, David G.; Jared, Bradley H.

With the recent advances in additive manufacturing (AM), long-range periodic lattice assemblies are being developed for vibration and shock mitigation components in aerospace and military applications with unique geometric and topological structures. There has been extensive work in understanding the static properties associated with varying topology of these lattice architectures, but there is almost no understanding of microstructural affects in such structures under high-strain rate dynamic loading conditions. Here we report the shock behavior of lattices with varying intrinsic grain structures achieved by post process annealing. High resolution 316L stainless steel lattices were 3D printed by a laser-powder bed fusion machine and characterized by computed tomography. Subsequent annealing resulted in stress-relieved and recrystallized lattices. Overall the lattices had strong cubic texture aligning with the x-, y- and z-directions of the build with a preference outside the build direction (z). The recrystallized sample had more equiaxed polygonal grains and a layer of BCC ferrite at the surface of the structure approximately 1 grain thick. Upon dynamic compression the as-deposited lattice showed steady compaction behavior while the heat-treated lattices exhibit negative velocity behavior indicative of failure. We attribute this to the stiffer BCC ferrite in the annealed lattices becoming damaged and fragmenting during compression.

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Shockwave dissipation by interface-dominated porous structures

AIP Advances

Dattelbaum, Dana M.; Ionita, Axinte; Patterson, Brian M.; Branch, Brittany A.; Kuettner, Lindsey

The advent of additive manufacturing (AM) has enabled topological control of structures at the micrometer scale, transforming the properties of polymers for a variety of applications. Examples include tailored mechanical responses, acoustic properties, and thermal properties. Porous polymer materials are a class of materials used for shock and blast mitigation, yet they frequently possess a lack of structural order and are largely developed and evaluated via trial-and-error. Here, we demonstrate control of shockwave dissipation through interface-dominated structures prepared by AM using 2-photon polymerization. A fractal structure with voids, or free surfaces, arranged less than 100 μm apart, allows for rarefaction interactions on the timescale of the shockwave loading. Simulations and dynamic x-ray phase contrast imaging experiments show that fractal structures with interfaces assembled within a “critical” volume reduce shockwave stress and wave velocity by over an order of magnitude within the first unit cell.

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37 Results
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