Kinematics of melting aluminum 6061 using IR + DIC
This is a presentation for the Society for Experimental Mechanics (SEM) annual conference.
This is a presentation for the Society for Experimental Mechanics (SEM) annual conference.
Applied Mathematical Modelling
A computational model of aluminum melting is proposed which captures both the thermal fluid-solid phase transition and the mechanical effects of oxidation. The model hybridizes ideas from smoothed particle hydrodynamics and bonded particle models to simulate both hydrodynamic flows and solid elasticity. Oxidation is represented by dynamically adding and deleting spring-like bonds between surface fluid particles to represent the formation and rupture of the oxide skin. Various complex systems are simulated to demonstrate the adaptability of the method and to illustrate the significant impact of skin properties on material flow. As a result, initial comparison to experiments of a melting aluminum cantilever highlights that the computational model can reproduce key qualitative features of aluminum relocation.
Ultimately, our experiment measures two quantities on an aluminum bar: motion (which modeling must predict) and temperature (which sets thermal boundary conditions). For motion, stereo DIC is a technique to use imaging data to provide displacements relative to a reference image down to 1/100th of a pixel. We use a calibrated infrared imaging method for accurate temperature measurements. We will be capturing simultaneous data and then registering temperature data in space to the same coordinate system as the displacement data. While we will later show that our experiments are repeatable, indicating that separate experiments for motion and temperature would provide similar data, the simultaneous and registered data removes test to test variability as a source of uncertainty for model calibration and reduces the number of time-consuming tests that must be performed.