TY - JOUR
T1 - A Microscopical Model for Incubation Time and Its Associated Dynamic Load-Carrying Capacity
AU - Yang, Xiao
AU - Ou, Zhuo Cheng
AU - Yan, Cheng
AU - Duan, Zhuoping
AU - Huang, Fenglei
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 World Scientific Publishing Europe Ltd.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - In recent decades, the incubation time has become a critical parameter to study dynamic failures for materials, but its underlying physical meaning is still vague and the corresponding model remains lacking. In this study, we first established a theoretical framework to evaluate incubation time, wherein a double atomic chain model with atomic thermal vibrations is leveraged. We leveraged three external force loading conditions to analyze incubation time and its associated dynamic load-carrying capacity (DLC). It can be found that the theoretical results for three metal materials (iron, tungsten and aluminum) exhibit reasonable consistencies with the experimental data, thus the model can be used to conduct preliminary studies for incubation time and DLC. The model suggests that, under the ramp loading with a platform amplitude of static strength, the amplitude duration does not remain constant but can quickly reach a constant with increasing ramp or loading rate, which implies that treating incubation time as a constant parameter is reasonable and thus lays a solid foundation for the previous macroscopic models on basis of incubation time. Meanwhile, it also suggests that the rate enhancement effect of failure strength can be obtained from external load and the constant atomic bond parameters without involving microscopic changes in material properties. Therefore, we microscopically unravel the rate enhancement effect of failure strength. Our study indicates that this effect is indeed a structural response, which accords with the previous macroscopical model.
AB - In recent decades, the incubation time has become a critical parameter to study dynamic failures for materials, but its underlying physical meaning is still vague and the corresponding model remains lacking. In this study, we first established a theoretical framework to evaluate incubation time, wherein a double atomic chain model with atomic thermal vibrations is leveraged. We leveraged three external force loading conditions to analyze incubation time and its associated dynamic load-carrying capacity (DLC). It can be found that the theoretical results for three metal materials (iron, tungsten and aluminum) exhibit reasonable consistencies with the experimental data, thus the model can be used to conduct preliminary studies for incubation time and DLC. The model suggests that, under the ramp loading with a platform amplitude of static strength, the amplitude duration does not remain constant but can quickly reach a constant with increasing ramp or loading rate, which implies that treating incubation time as a constant parameter is reasonable and thus lays a solid foundation for the previous macroscopic models on basis of incubation time. Meanwhile, it also suggests that the rate enhancement effect of failure strength can be obtained from external load and the constant atomic bond parameters without involving microscopic changes in material properties. Therefore, we microscopically unravel the rate enhancement effect of failure strength. Our study indicates that this effect is indeed a structural response, which accords with the previous macroscopical model.
KW - Double atomic chain
KW - atomic bond break
KW - dynamic failure
KW - dynamic load-carrying capacity
KW - incubation time
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85135332519&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1142/S1758825122500600
DO - 10.1142/S1758825122500600
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85135332519
SN - 1758-8251
JO - International Journal of Applied Mechanics
JF - International Journal of Applied Mechanics
M1 - 2250060
ER -