4.6 Article

Measurement of elastic precursor decay in pre-heated aluminum films under ultra-fast laser generated shocks

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS
Volume 123, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/1.5027390

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy through the Stewardship Science Academic Alliance [DE-NA0001989, DE-NA0002919]
  2. U.S. Department of Energy through LANL's science campaign 2
  3. LANL Laboratory Directed RD [20170070DR]

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This article presents results from laser-driven shock compression experiments performed on pre-heated pure aluminum films at temperatures ranging from 23 to 400 degrees C. The samples were vapor deposited on the surface of a 500 mu m thick sapphire substrate and mounted onto a custom holder with an integrated ring-heater to enable variable initial temperature conditions. A chirped pulse amplified laser was used to generate a pulse for both shocking the films and for probing the free surface velocity using Ultrafast Dynamic Ellipsometry. The particle velocity traces measured at the free surface clearly show elastic and plastic wave separation, which was used to estimate the decay of the elastic precursor amplitude over propagation distances ranging from 0.278 to 4.595 mu m. Elastic precursors (which also correspond to dynamic material strength under uniaxial strain) of increasing amplitudes were observed with increasing initial sample temperatures for all propagation distances, which is consistent with expectations for aluminum in a deformation regime where phonon drag limits the mobility of dislocations. The experimental results show peak elastic amplitudes corresponding to axial stresses of over 7.5 GPa; estimates for plastic strain-rates in the samples are of the order 10(9)/s. The measured elastic amplitudes at the micron length scales are compared with those at the millimeter length-scales using a two-parameter model and used to correlate the rate sensitivity of the dynamic strength at strain-rates ranging from 10(3) to 10(9)/s and elevated temperature conditions. The overall trend, as inferred from the experimental data, indicates that the temperature-strengthening effect decreases with increasing plastic strain-rates. Published by AIP Publishing.

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