Impact Response of Thermally Sprayed Metal Deposits
ORAL
Abstract
Gas-gun experiments have probed the impact response of tantalum specimens that were additively manufactured using a controlled thermal spray deposition process. Velocity interferometer (VISAR) diagnostics provided time-resolved measurements of sample response under one-dimensional ($i.e.$, uniaxial strain) shock compression to peak stresses ranging between 1 and 4 GPa. The acquired wave-profile data have been analyzed to determine the Hugoniot Elastic Limit (HEL), Hugoniot equation of state, and high-pressure yield strength of the thermally deposited samples for comparison to published baseline results for conventionally wrought tantalum. The effects of composition, porosity, and microstructure ($e.g.$, grain/splat size and morphology) are assessed to explain differences in the dynamic mechanical behavior of spray-deposited versus conventional material. *Sandia National Laboratories is a multi-program laboratory managed and operated by Sandia Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of Lockheed Martin Corporation, for the U.S. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration under contract DE-AC04-94AL85000.
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Authors
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J. L. Wise
Sandia Natl Labs, Sandia National Laboratories*
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A. C. Hall
Sandia National Laboratories*
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N. W. Moore
Sandia National Laboratories*
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S. D. Pautz
Sandia National Laboratories*
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B. C. Franke
Sandia National Laboratories*
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W. M. Scherzinger
Sandia National Laboratories*
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Don Brown
Los Alamos National Laboratory