4.6 Article

Propagation and dispersion of shock waves in magnetoelastic materials

Journal

SMART MATERIALS AND STRUCTURES
Volume 26, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1361-665X/aa973d

Keywords

magnetoelastic; laser shock; Galfenol; ferromagnetic; high strain rate; wave propagation; wave coupling

Funding

  1. BAA-AFOSR University Center of Excellence
  2. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory [DE-AC52-07NA27344]

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Previous studies examining the response of magnetoelastic materials to shock waves have predominantly focused on applications involving pulsed power generation, with limited attention given to the actual wave propagation characteristics. This study provides detailed magnetic and mechanical measurements of magnetoelastic shock wave propagation and dispersion. Laser generated rarefacted shock waves exceeding 3 GPa with rise times of 10 ns were introduced to samples of the magnetoelastic material Galfenol. The resulting mechanical measurements reveal the evolution of the shock into a compressive acoustic front with lateral release waves. Importantly, the wave continues to disperse even after it has decayed into an acoustic wave, due in large part to magnetoelastic coupling. The magnetic data reveal predominantly shear wave mediated magnetoelastic coupling, and were also used to noninvasively measure the wave speed. The external magnetic field controlled a 30% increase in wave propagation speed, attributed to a 70% increase in average stiffness. Finally, magnetic signals propagating along the sample over 20x faster than the mechanical wave were measured, indicating these materials can act as passive antennas that transmit information in response to mechanical stimuli.

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