Investigating deformation mechanisms in shock compressed tantalum via femtosecond diffraction
ORAL
Abstract
When materials are compressed beyond their Hugoniot elastic limit, they act to relieve built up shear stress by deforming plastically. Tantalum provides an interesting case to study owing to its multitude of competing plasticity mechanisms, a combination of dislocation flow (slip) and deformation twinning. We present the first direct, in-situ observation of twinning in shock-compressed metals using femtosecond x-ray diffraction performed at the MEC beamline at LCLS. Tantalum with an initial (110) fiber texture was subjected to shock compression in the 10-300 GPa pressure range at strain-rates above $10^9 \mathrm{s}^{-1}$ and the ultrafast texture evolution was recorded via in-situ, time-resolved x-ray diffraction. The onset of twinning was observed at 25 GPa, reaching a twin-dominated response for shock strengths of $\sim$50-75 GPa. At high shock pressure ($>$150 GPa) the twin fraction is lower and the response is slip dominated. These results compare favourably with molecular dynamics simulations performed using the Ravelo EAM potential, which also show a twin-slip transition.
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Authors
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David McGonegle
University of Oxford, UK
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Marcin Sliwa
University of Oxford, UK
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Justin Wark
University of Oxford, UK
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Cynthia Bolme
Los Alamos National Laboratory
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Andrew Higginbotham
University of York, UK
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Amy Jenei
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
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Hye-Sook Park
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
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Bruce Remington
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
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Rob Rudd
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
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Damian Swift
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
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Chris Wehrenberg
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
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Luis Zepeda-Ruiz
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
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Hae Ja Lee
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, SLAC - Natl Accelerator Lab
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Bob Nagler
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, SLAC - Natl Accelerator Lab