Shock response of a model structured nanofoam of Cu

  • F. P. Zhao
  • , Q. An
  • , B. Li
  • , H. A. Wu
  • , W. A. Goddard
  • , S. N. Luo

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Using large-scale molecular dynamics simulations, we investigate shock response of a model Cu nanofoam with cylindrical voids and a high initial porosity (50% theoretical density), including elastic and plastic deformation, Hugoniot states, shock-induced melting, partial or complete void collapse, nanojetting, and hotspot formation. The elastic-plastic and overtaking shocks are observed at different shock strengths. The simulated Hugoniot states can be described with a modified, power-law P - α (pressure-porosity) model, and agree with shock experiments on Cu powders, as well as the compacted Hugoniot predicted with the Grüneisen equation of state. Shock-induced melting shows no clear signs of bulk premelting or superheating. Voids collapse via plastic flow nucleated from voids, and the exact processes are shock strength dependent. With increasing shock strengths, void collapse transits from the "geometrical" mode (collapse of a void is dominated by crystallography and void geometry and can be different from that of one another) to "hydrodynamic" mode (collapse of a void is similar to one another); the collapse may be achieved predominantly by flow along the {111} slip planes, by way of alternating compression and tension zones, by means of transverse flows, via forward and transverse flows, or through forward nanojetting. The internal jetting induces pronounced shock front roughening, leading to internal hotspot formation and sizable high speed jets on atomically flat free surfaces.

Original languageEnglish
Article number063516
JournalJournal of Applied Physics
Volume113
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 14 Feb 2013
Externally publishedYes

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