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High Throughput Coefficient Thermal Expansion Testing Utilizing Digital Image Correlation

Casias, Zachary C.

Dr. Fitzgerald, a postdoc at Sandia National Laboratories, works in a materials of mechanics group characterizing material properties of ductile materials. Her presentation focuses specifically on increasing throughput of coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) measurements with the use of optical strain measurements, called digital image correlation (DIC). Currently, the coefficient of thermal expansion is found through a time intensive process called dilatometry. There are multiple types of dilatometers. One type, a double push rod mechanical dilatometer, uses and LVDT to measure the expansion of a specimen in one direction. It uses a reference material with known properties to determine the CTE of the specimen in question. Testing about 500 samples using the double push rod mechanical dilatometer would take about 2 years if testing Monday through Friday, because the reference material needs to be at a constant temperature and heating must done slowly to ensure no thermal gradients across the rod. A second type, scissors type dilatometer, pinches a sample using a “scissor-like” appendage that also uses a LVDT to measure thermal expansion as the sample is heated. Finally, laser dilatometry, was created to provide a non-contact means to measure thermal expansion. This process greatly reduces the time required to setup a measurement but is still only able to measure one sample at a time. The time required to test 500 samples gets reduced to 3.5 weeks. Additionally, to measure expansion in different directions, multiple lasers must be used. Dr. Fitzgerald solved this conundrum by using an optical measurement technique called digital image correlation to create strain maps in multiple orientations as well as measuring multiple samples at once. Using this technique, Dr. Fitzgerald can test 500 samples, conservatively, in 2 days.

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Characterization of Tri-lab β-Tin (Sn)

Lim, Hojun L.; Casias, Zachary C.; Carroll, Jay D.; Battaile, Corbett C.; Lane, James M.; Fensin, Saryu J.

This report documents details of the microstructure and mechanical properties of -tin (Sn), that is used in the Tri-lab (Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL), Sandia National Laboratories (SNL)) collaboration project on Multi-phase Tin Strength. We report microstructural features detailing the crystallographic texture and grain morphology of as-received -tin from electron back scatter diffraction (EBSD). Temperature and strain rate dependent mechanical behavior was investigated by multiple compression tests at temperatures of 200K to 400K and strain rates of 0.0001 /s to 100 /s. Tri-lab tin showed significant temperature and strain rate dependent strength with no significant plastic anisotropy. A sample to sample material variation was observed from duplicate compression tests and texture measurements. Compression data was used to calibrate model parameters for temperature and rate dependent strength models, Johnson-Cook (JC), Zerilli-Armstrong (ZA) and Preston-Tonks-Wallace (PTW) strength models.

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Effects of Applied Interfacial Pressure on Li-Metal Cycling Performance and Morphology in 4 M LiFSI in DME

ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces

Harrison, Katharine L.; Goriparti, Subbu G.; Merrill, Laura C.; Long, Daniel M.; Warren, Benjamin A.; Perdue, Brian R.; Casias, Zachary C.; Cuillier, Paul C.; Boyce, Brad B.; Jungjohann, Katherine L.

Lithium-metal anodes can theoretically enable 10x higher gravimetric capacity than conventional graphite anodes. However, Li-metal anode cycling has proven difficult due to porous and dendritic morphologies, extensive parasitic solid electrolyte interphase reactions, and formation of dead Li. We systematically investigate the effects of applied interfacial pressure on Li-metal anode cycling performance and morphology in the recently developed and highly efficient 4 M lithium bis(fluorosulfonyl)imide in 1,2-dimethoxyethane electrolyte. We present cycling, morphology, and impedance data at a current density of 0.5 mA/cm2 and a capacity of 2 mAh/cm2 at applied interfacial pressures of 0, 0.01, 0.1, 1, and 10 MPa. Cryo-focused ion beam milling and cryo-scanning electron microscopy imaging in cross section reveal that increasing the applied pressure during Li deposition from 0 to 10 MPa leads to greater than a fivefold reduction in thickness (and therefore volume) of the deposited Li. This suggests that pressure during cycling can have a profound impact on the practical volumetric energy density for Li-metal anodes. A “goldilocks zone” of cell performance is observed at intermediate pressures of 0.1–1 MPa. Increasing pressure from 0 to 1 MPa generally improves cell-to-cell reproducibility, cycling stability, and Coulombic efficiency. However, the highest pressure (10 MPa) results in high cell overpotential and evidence of soft short circuits, which likely result from transport limitations associated with increased pressure causing local pore closure in the separator. All cells exhibit at least some signs of cycling instability after 50 cycles when cycled to 2 mAh/cm2 with thin 50 μm Li counter electrodes, though instability decreases with increasing pressure. In contrast, cells cycled to only 1 mAh/cm2 perform well for 50 cycles, indicating that capacity plays an important role in cycling stability.

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Mechanical testing of PH13-8Mo H950 Steel for Xue-Wierzbicki Fracture Criterion Determination at 20° C and -40° C

Noell, Philip N.; Pathare, Priya R.; Casias, Zachary C.; Huber, Todd H.; Laing, John R.; Carroll, Jay D.

Mechanical testing was conducted to collect the data needed to build a Xue-Wierzbicki (XW) fracture model for PH13-8 Mo H950 stainless steel (PH 13-8 SS). This model is intended for use in structural analysis of this material between room temperature and -40° C. Tests were performed on four different specimen geometries such that a range of stress states were characterized at room temperature and -40° C. Tensile tests on R5 tensile specimens were also performed to assess material anisotropy. Fracture toughness test were also conducted. The fracture toughness of this material at -40° C was 68% of the room-temperature value. Material strength generally increased with decreasing temperature while the opposite trend was observed for ductility. These trends were most pronounced for specimens with the largest stress triaxialities.

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A multiscale study of damage in elastomeric syntactic foams

Journal of Materials Science

Brown, Judith A.; Carroll, Jay D.; Huddleston, B.; Casias, Zachary C.; Long, K.N.

Damage mechanisms in elastomeric syntactic foams filled with glass microballoons (GMB) and resulting effects on the macroscale elastic constants have been investigated. Direct numerical simulations of the material microstructure, composite theory analyses, and uniaxial compression tests across a range of filler volume fractions were conducted. The room temperature and elastic behavior of composites with undamaged, fully debonded, and fully crushed GMBs were investigated for syntactic foams with a polydimethylsiloxane matrix. Good agreement was obtained between numerical studies, composite theory, and experiments. Debonding was studied via finite element models due to the difficulty of isolating this damage mechanism experimentally. The predictions indicate that the bulk modulus is insensitive to the state of debonding at low-GMB-volume fractions but is dramatically reduced if GMBs are crushed. The shear behavior is affected by both debonding and crush damage mechanisms. The acute sensitivity of the bulk modulus to crushed GMBs is further studied in simulations in which only a fraction of GMBs are crushed. We find that the composite bulk modulus drops severely even when just a small fraction of GMBs are crushed. Various material parameters such as GMB wall thickness, volume fraction, and minimum balloon spacing are also investigated, and they show that the results presented here are general and apply to a wide range of microstructure and GMB filler properties.

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14 Results
14 Results