4.7 Article

Fingerprinting shock-induced deformations via diffraction

期刊

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
卷 11, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-88908-y

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  1. Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies [2019BU0142]
  2. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration [DE-NA0003857]
  3. United States Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration [DE-NA0003525]
  4. High PerformanceHigh-Performance Computing Facility at the University of Connecticut

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During shock loading, materials go through various transient deformation modes that can influence their final state. By atomistic simulation and diffraction experiments, specific deformation characteristics were identified to aid in interpreting the results of shock experiments.
During the various stages of shock loading, many transient modes of deformation can activate and deactivate to affect the final state of a material. In order to fundamentally understand and optimize a shock response, researchers seek the ability to probe these modes in real-time and measure the microstructural evolutions with nanoscale resolution. Neither post-mortem analysis on recovered samples nor continuum-based methods during shock testing meet both requirements. High-speed diffraction offers a solution, but the interpretation of diffractograms suffers numerous debates and uncertainties. By atomistically simulating the shock, X-ray diffraction, and electron diffraction of three representative BCC and FCC metallic systems, we systematically isolated the characteristic fingerprints of salient deformation modes, such as dislocation slip (stacking faults), deformation twinning, and phase transformation as observed in experimental diffractograms. This study demonstrates how to use simulated diffractograms to connect the contributions from concurrent deformation modes to the evolutions of both 1D line profiles and 2D patterns for diffractograms from single crystals. Harnessing these fingerprints alongside information on local pressures and plasticity contributions facilitate the interpretation of shock experiments with cutting-edge resolution in both space and time.

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