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On the Dynamics of the Material with Transformed Microstructure. / Morozov, N. F.; Indeitsev, D. A.; Semenov, B. N.; Vakulenko, S. A.; Skubov, D. Yu; Lukin, A. V.; Popov, I. A.; Vavilov, D. S.

In: Physical Mesomechanics, Vol. 21, No. 5, 01.09.2018, p. 379-389.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Morozov, NF, Indeitsev, DA, Semenov, BN, Vakulenko, SA, Skubov, DY, Lukin, AV, Popov, IA & Vavilov, DS 2018, 'On the Dynamics of the Material with Transformed Microstructure', Physical Mesomechanics, vol. 21, no. 5, pp. 379-389. https://doi.org/10.1134/S1029959918050016, https://doi.org/10.1134/S1029959918050016

APA

Morozov, N. F., Indeitsev, D. A., Semenov, B. N., Vakulenko, S. A., Skubov, D. Y., Lukin, A. V., Popov, I. A., & Vavilov, D. S. (2018). On the Dynamics of the Material with Transformed Microstructure. Physical Mesomechanics, 21(5), 379-389. https://doi.org/10.1134/S1029959918050016, https://doi.org/10.1134/S1029959918050016

Vancouver

Author

Morozov, N. F. ; Indeitsev, D. A. ; Semenov, B. N. ; Vakulenko, S. A. ; Skubov, D. Yu ; Lukin, A. V. ; Popov, I. A. ; Vavilov, D. S. / On the Dynamics of the Material with Transformed Microstructure. In: Physical Mesomechanics. 2018 ; Vol. 21, No. 5. pp. 379-389.

BibTeX

@article{08382357ecaf4bd6b023e03e24e00c78,
title = "On the Dynamics of the Material with Transformed Microstructure",
abstract = "Numerous experimental studies on shock wave loading of metals have shown by electron microscopy that the crystal structure of the material can undergo transformation in a certain impactor velocity range. At the macroscale, these changes are observed as energy losses associated with the formation of a new structure. The losses are manifested on the time-velocity profile of the rear target surface which contains key information about the material properties. In this paper, a two-component model of a material with a nonlinear internal interaction force is proposed for the description of structural transformations, taking into account the periodic structure of the material. Dynamic equations are written with respect to the motion of the center of mass of the components acting as a measured macroparameter, as well as with respect to their relative displacement serving as the internal degree of freedom responsible for structural transformations. The proposed model is applied to solve a quasi-static problem of the kinematic extension of a two-component rod in order to determine the parameters of a nonmonotonic stressstrain curve, which is often used in describing materials subjected to phase transformations. By solving a dynamic problem of nonstationary impact on the material by a short rectangular pulse, the effect of nonstationary wave damping is demonstrated which is associated with the wave energy dissipation in structural changes of the material. An analytical expression is obtained on the basis of a continuous-discrete analogy for estimating the duration of structural transformations and the parameter characterizing the internal interaction force between the components. The conclusions are confirmed by a numerical solution of a nonlinear Cauchy problem within the finite difference framework.",
keywords = "finite difference method, nonlinear interaction force, structural transformation dynamics, two-component model",
author = "Morozov, {N. F.} and Indeitsev, {D. A.} and Semenov, {B. N.} and Vakulenko, {S. A.} and Skubov, {D. Yu} and Lukin, {A. V.} and Popov, {I. A.} and Vavilov, {D. S.}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2018, Pleiades Publishing, Ltd.",
year = "2018",
month = sep,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1134/S1029959918050016",
language = "English",
volume = "21",
pages = "379--389",
journal = "Physical Mesomechanics",
issn = "1029-9599",
publisher = "Springer Nature",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - On the Dynamics of the Material with Transformed Microstructure

AU - Morozov, N. F.

AU - Indeitsev, D. A.

AU - Semenov, B. N.

AU - Vakulenko, S. A.

AU - Skubov, D. Yu

AU - Lukin, A. V.

AU - Popov, I. A.

AU - Vavilov, D. S.

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2018, Pleiades Publishing, Ltd.

PY - 2018/9/1

Y1 - 2018/9/1

N2 - Numerous experimental studies on shock wave loading of metals have shown by electron microscopy that the crystal structure of the material can undergo transformation in a certain impactor velocity range. At the macroscale, these changes are observed as energy losses associated with the formation of a new structure. The losses are manifested on the time-velocity profile of the rear target surface which contains key information about the material properties. In this paper, a two-component model of a material with a nonlinear internal interaction force is proposed for the description of structural transformations, taking into account the periodic structure of the material. Dynamic equations are written with respect to the motion of the center of mass of the components acting as a measured macroparameter, as well as with respect to their relative displacement serving as the internal degree of freedom responsible for structural transformations. The proposed model is applied to solve a quasi-static problem of the kinematic extension of a two-component rod in order to determine the parameters of a nonmonotonic stressstrain curve, which is often used in describing materials subjected to phase transformations. By solving a dynamic problem of nonstationary impact on the material by a short rectangular pulse, the effect of nonstationary wave damping is demonstrated which is associated with the wave energy dissipation in structural changes of the material. An analytical expression is obtained on the basis of a continuous-discrete analogy for estimating the duration of structural transformations and the parameter characterizing the internal interaction force between the components. The conclusions are confirmed by a numerical solution of a nonlinear Cauchy problem within the finite difference framework.

AB - Numerous experimental studies on shock wave loading of metals have shown by electron microscopy that the crystal structure of the material can undergo transformation in a certain impactor velocity range. At the macroscale, these changes are observed as energy losses associated with the formation of a new structure. The losses are manifested on the time-velocity profile of the rear target surface which contains key information about the material properties. In this paper, a two-component model of a material with a nonlinear internal interaction force is proposed for the description of structural transformations, taking into account the periodic structure of the material. Dynamic equations are written with respect to the motion of the center of mass of the components acting as a measured macroparameter, as well as with respect to their relative displacement serving as the internal degree of freedom responsible for structural transformations. The proposed model is applied to solve a quasi-static problem of the kinematic extension of a two-component rod in order to determine the parameters of a nonmonotonic stressstrain curve, which is often used in describing materials subjected to phase transformations. By solving a dynamic problem of nonstationary impact on the material by a short rectangular pulse, the effect of nonstationary wave damping is demonstrated which is associated with the wave energy dissipation in structural changes of the material. An analytical expression is obtained on the basis of a continuous-discrete analogy for estimating the duration of structural transformations and the parameter characterizing the internal interaction force between the components. The conclusions are confirmed by a numerical solution of a nonlinear Cauchy problem within the finite difference framework.

KW - finite difference method

KW - nonlinear interaction force

KW - structural transformation dynamics

KW - two-component model

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85057003689&partnerID=8YFLogxK

UR - http://link.springer.com/10.1134/S1029959918050016

UR - http://www.mendeley.com/research/dynamics-material-transformed-microstructure

U2 - 10.1134/S1029959918050016

DO - 10.1134/S1029959918050016

M3 - Article

VL - 21

SP - 379

EP - 389

JO - Physical Mesomechanics

JF - Physical Mesomechanics

SN - 1029-9599

IS - 5

ER -

ID: 36067135