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Bioinspired synthesis of thermally stable and mechanically strong nanocomposite coatings

MRS Advances

Xu, Guangping X.; Fan, Hongyou F.; McCoy, C.A.; Mills, Melissa M.; Schwarz, Jens S.

Abstract: An innovative biomimetic method has been developed to synthesize layered nanocomposite coatings using silica and sugar-derived carbon to mimic the formation of a natural seashell structure. The layered nanocomposites are fabricated through alternate coatings of condensed silica and sugar. Sugar-derived carbon is a cost-effective material as well as environmentally friendly. Pyrolysis of sugar will form polycyclic aromatic carbon sheets, i.e., carbon black. The resulting final nanocomposite coatings can survive temperatures of more than 1150 °C and potentially up to 1650 °C. These coatings have strong mechanical properties, with hardness of more than 11 GPa and elastic modulus of 120 GPa, which are 80% greater than those of pure silica. The layered coatings have many applications, such as shielding in the form of mechanical barriers, body armor, and space debris shields. Graphical abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.]

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Impact Response of Control Atmosphere Plasma Spray Deposited Materials

Branch, Brittany A.; McCoy, C.A.; Vackel, Andrew V.

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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Melting and density of MgSiO3 determined by shock compression of bridgmanite to 1254GPa

Nature Communications

Fei, Yingwei; Seagle, Christopher T.; Townsend, Joshua P.; McCoy, C.A.; Boujibar, Asmaa; Driscoll, Peter; Shulenburger, Luke N.; Furnish, Michael D.

The essential data for interior and thermal evolution models of the Earth and super-Earths are the density and melting of mantle silicate under extreme conditions. Here, we report an unprecedently high melting temperature of MgSiO3 at 500 GPa by direct shockwave loading of pre-synthesized dense MgSiO3 (bridgmanite) using the Z Pulsed Power Facility. We also present the first high-precision density data of crystalline MgSiO3 to 422 GPa and 7200 K and of silicate melt to 1254 GPa. The experimental density measurements support our density functional theory based molecular dynamics calculations, providing benchmarks for theoretical calculations under extreme conditions. The excellent agreement between experiment and theory provides a reliable reference density profile for super-Earth mantles. Furthermore, the observed upper bound of melting temperature, 9430 K at 500 GPa, provides a critical constraint on the accretion energy required to melt the mantle and the prospect of driving a dynamo in massive rocky planets.

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Transmitted wave measurements in cold sprayed materials under dynamic compression

McCoy, C.A.; Branch, Brittany A.; Vackel, Andrew V.

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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Sound velocity, shear modulus, and shock melting of beryllium along the Hugoniot

Physical Review B

McCoy, C.A.; Knudson, Marcus D.; Desjarlais, Michael P.

Magnetically launched flyer plates were used to investigate the shock response of beryllium between 90 and 300 GPa. Solid aluminum flyer plates drove steady shocks into polycrystalline beryllium to constrain the Hugoniot from 90 to 190 GPa. Multilayered copper/aluminum flyer plates generated a shock followed by an overtaking rarefaction which was used to determine the sound velocity in both solid and liquid beryllium between 130 and 300 GPa. Disappearance of the longitudinal wave was used to identify the onset of melt along the Hugoniot and measurements were compared to density functional theory calculations to explore the proposed hcp-bcc transition at high pressure. The onset of melt along the Hugoniot was identified at ∼205GPa, which is in good agreement with theoretical predictions. These results show no clear indication of an hcp-bcc transition prior to melt along the beryllium Hugoniot. Rather, the shear stress, determined from the release wave profiles, was found to gradually decrease with stress and eventually vanish at the onset of melt.

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Absolute measurement of the Hugoniot and sound velocity of liquid copper at multimegabar pressures

Physical Review B

McCoy, C.A.; Knudson, Marcus D.; Root, Seth R.

Measurement of the Hugoniot and sound velocity provides information on the bulk modulus and Grüneisen parameter of a material at extreme conditions. The capability to launch multilayered (copper/aluminum) flyer plates at velocities in excess of 20 km/s with the Sandia Z accelerator has enabled high-precision sound-velocity measurements at previously inaccessible pressures. For these experiments, the sound velocity of the copper flyer must be accurately known in the multi-Mbar regime. Here we describe the development of copper as an absolutely calibrated sound-velocity standard for high-precision measurements at pressures in excess of 400 GPa. Using multilayered flyer plates, we performed absolute measurements of the Hugoniot and sound velocity of copper for pressures from 500 to 1200 GPa. These measurements enabled the determination of the Grüneisen parameter for dense liquid copper, clearly showing a density dependence above the melt transition. Combined with earlier data at lower pressures, these results constrain the sound velocity as a function of pressure, enabling the use of copper as a Hugoniot and sound-velocity standard for pressures up to 1200 GPa.

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Lagrangian technique to calculate window interface velocity from shock velocity measurements: Application for quartz windows

Journal of Applied Physics

McCoy, C.A.; Knudson, Marcus D.

Measurement of the window interface velocity is a common technique for investigating the dynamic response materials at high strain rates. However, these measurements are limited in pressure to the range where the window remains transparent. The most common window material for this application is lithium fluoride, which under single shock compression becomes opaque at ∼200 GPa. To date, no other window material has been identified for use at higher pressures. Here, we present a Lagrangian technique to calculate the interface velocity from a continuously measured shock velocity, with application to quartz. The quartz shock front becomes reflective upon melt, at ∼100 GPa, enabling the use of velocity interferometry to continuously measure the shock velocity. This technique overlaps with the range of pressures accessible with LiF windows and extends the region where wave profile measurements are possible to pressures in excess of 2000 GPa. We show through simulated data that the technique accurately reproduces the interface velocity within 20% of the initial state, and that the Lagrangian technique represents a significant improvement over a simple linear approximation.

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Measurements of the sound velocity of shock-compressed liquid silica to 1100 GPa

Journal of Applied Physics

McCoy, C.A.; Gregor, M.C.; Polsin, D.N.; Fratanduono, D.E.; Celliers, P.M.; Boehly, T.R.; Meyerhofer, D.D.

The sound velocity in a shocked material provides information about its off-Hugoniot behavior of a material at high pressures. This information can be used to extend the knowledge gained in Hugoniot experiments and to model the re-shock and release behavior. Silica is one of the most important materials for equation of state studies because of its prevalence in the earth's interior and the well-defined properties of α-quartz. This article presents the sound velocity measurements of amorphous fused silica over the range 200 to 1100 GPa using laser-driven shocks and an α-quartz standard. These measurements demonstrate the technique proposed by Fratanduono et al. [J. Appl. Phys. 116, 033517 (2014)] to determine the sound velocity from the arrival of acoustic perturbations. The results compare favorably to the SESAME 7386 equation-of-state table. The Grüneisen parameter was calculated from the sound velocity data and found to be Γ=0.66±0.05 at densities above 6 g/cm3, an increase in precision by a factor of two over previous measurements.

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19 Results
19 Results