Cylindrical dog-bone (or dumbbell) shaped samples have become a common design for dynamic tensile tests of ductile materials with a Kolsky tension bar. When a direct measurement of displacement between the bar ends is used to calculate the specimen strain, the actual strain in the specimen gage section is overestimated due to strain in the specimen shoulder and needs to be corrected. The currently available correction method works well for elastic-perfectly plastic materials but may not be applicable to materials that exhibit significant work-hardening behavior. In this study, we developed a new specimen strain correction method for materials possessing an elastic-plastic with linear work-hardening stress–strain response. A Kolsky tension bar test of a Fe-49Co-2V alloy (known by trade names Hiperco and Permendur) was used to demonstrate the new specimen strain correction method. This new correction method was also used to correct specimen strains in Kolsky tension bar experiments on two other materials: 4140 alloy, and 304L-VAR stainless steel, which had different work-hardening behavior.
Silicone elastomer filled with glass micro balloons (GMB) is an elastomeric syntactic foam used in electronics and component packaging for encapsulation, potting, stress-relief layer, and electrical insulation purposes. Under mechanical loading, the reinforcing phase, namely the GMBs embedded in the elastomer matrix, may break or delaminate, leading to internal damage and macroscale stiffness degradation, which can alter the material's protective capacity against mechanical shock and vibration. The degree of damage is controlled by the loading history, delamination, and failure behavior of the GMBs. We investigate the GMB failure behavior in this work wherein we present an indentation experiment to measure the force required to fail individual GMBs that are either embedded in the elastomer matrix or adhered to the surface of an elastomer layer. The indentation apparatus is augmented with an inverted optical microscope to enable in situ imaging of the GMB. Failure modes for the embedded or non-embedded GMBs are discussed based on the morphology of the broken GMBs and the measured failure forces. We also measure the adhesion energy between the glass balloon and the elastomer, based on which the possibility of delamination between the GMB and the surrounding elastomer matrix during the failure process is evaluated. Our results can facilitate the development of a failure criterion of GMBs which is necessary for establishing a physics-based constitutive model to describe the macroscopic damage mechanics of elastomeric syntactic foams.
In this study, a multiscale electron microscopy-based approach is applied to understanding how different aspects of the microstructure in a notched AA6061-T6, including grain boundaries, triple junctions, and intermetallic particles, promote localized dislocation accumulation as a function of applied tensile strain and depth from the sample surface. Experimental measurements and crystal plasticity simulations of dislocation distributions as a function of distance from specified microstructural features both showed preferential dislocation accumulation near intermetallic particles relative to grain boundaries and triple junctions. High resolution electron backscatter diffraction and site-specific transmission electron microscopy characterization showed that high levels of dislocation accumulation near intermetallic particles led to the development of an ultrafine sub-grain microstructure, indicative of a much higher level of local plasticity than predicted from the coarser measurements and simulations. In addition, high resolution measurements in front of a crack tip suggested a compounding influence of intermetallic particles and grain boundaries in dictating crack propagation pathways.
The mechanical response of additively manufactured (AM) stainless steel 304L has been investigated across a broad range of loading conditions, covering 11 decades of strain rate, and compared with the behaviors of traditional ingot-derived (wrought) material. In general, the AM material exhibits a greater strength and reduced ductility compared with the baseline wrought form. These differences are consistently found from quasi-static and high strain rate tests. A detailed investigation of the microstructure, the defect structure, the phase, and the composition of both forms reveals differences that may contribute to the differing mechanical behaviors. Compared with the baseline wrought material, dense AM stainless steel 304L has a more complex grain structure with substantial sub-structure, a fine dispersion of ferrite, increased dislocation density, oxide dispersions and larger amounts of nitrogen. In-situ neutron diffraction studies conducted during quasi-static loading suggest that the increased strength of AM material is due to its initially greater dislocation density. The flow strength of both forms is correlated with dislocation density through a square root dependence akin to a Taylor-like relationship. Neutron diffraction measurements of lattice strains also correlate with a crystal plasticity finite element simulations of the tensile test. Other simulations predict a significant degree of elastic and plastic anisotropy due to crystallographic texture. Hopkinson tests at higher strain rates $\dot{ε}$ = 500 and 2500 s-1 ) also show a greater strength for AM stainless steel 304L; although, the differences compared with wrought are reduced at higher strain rates. Gas gun impact tests, including reverse ballistic, forward ballistic and spall tests, consistently reveal a larger dynamic strength in the AM material. The Hugoniot Elastic Limit (HEL) of AM SS 304L exceeds that of wrought material although considerable variability is observed with the AM material. Forward ballistic testing demonstrates spall strengths of AM material (3.27 -- 3.91 GPa) that exceed that of the wrought material (2.63 -- 2.88 GPa). The Hugoniot equation-of-state for AM samples matches archived data for this metal alloy.
This report documents recent experiments on the structural properties of Nitronic 60, Level 5 (cold worked to approximately 50% reduction in diameter). Material from two different vendors was examined. Different cold working approaches by the two vendors resulted in inhomogeneous material properties that varied as a function of distance from the center of the rod. Measurements were compared to Sandia specifications (7343200-7343207). The effect of several parameters on structural properties was examined, including lot-to-lot variability, lot diameter, radial location of tensile bars, tensile bar size, and cold working method. Most significantly, the apparent tensile strength, yield strength, and ductility were found to all vary with radial distance from the center of the bar.