TY - GEN
T1 - Mesoscale Numerical Analysis of Thermal-mechanical-chemical Responses of Polymer-bonded Explosives under Impact Loading
AU - Wang, Xinjie
AU - Wu, Yanqing
AU - Huang, Fenglei
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© IDS 2018. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - We developed a mesoscopic reactive model for cyclotetramethylene tetranitramine (HMX) single crystal, which incorporates nonlinear anisotropic elasticity, crystal plasticity, and temperature-dependent chemical reaction. Together with a viscoelasticity model for the polymer binder - Estane 5703, the proposed models were implemented in the finite element code ABAQUS by the user subroutine VUMAT. Mesoscale heterogeneous PBX 9501 samples were constructed and loaded under low-strength impact scenarios from 100 m/s to 600 m/s. Mesoscale thermal-mechanical-chemical responses (stress, temperature, and extent of reaction) are analyzed and homogenized across the microstructure to obtain the response at the macroscale. Results show that crystal anisotropy and microstructural heterogeneity are responsible for the nonuniform stress field and fluctuations of the stress wave front. At a critical impact velocity (> 300 m/s), a chemical reaction is triggered because the temperature contributed by the volumetric and dislocation-based plastic works is sufficiently high, which may lead to the ignition or detonation. By comparing with the macroscale experimental measurements, the results presented here can help to develop a more accurate physical-related continuum model in the future. Moreover, this framework has important implications in understanding hot spot ignition processes and improving predictive capabilities in energetic materials.
AB - We developed a mesoscopic reactive model for cyclotetramethylene tetranitramine (HMX) single crystal, which incorporates nonlinear anisotropic elasticity, crystal plasticity, and temperature-dependent chemical reaction. Together with a viscoelasticity model for the polymer binder - Estane 5703, the proposed models were implemented in the finite element code ABAQUS by the user subroutine VUMAT. Mesoscale heterogeneous PBX 9501 samples were constructed and loaded under low-strength impact scenarios from 100 m/s to 600 m/s. Mesoscale thermal-mechanical-chemical responses (stress, temperature, and extent of reaction) are analyzed and homogenized across the microstructure to obtain the response at the macroscale. Results show that crystal anisotropy and microstructural heterogeneity are responsible for the nonuniform stress field and fluctuations of the stress wave front. At a critical impact velocity (> 300 m/s), a chemical reaction is triggered because the temperature contributed by the volumetric and dislocation-based plastic works is sufficiently high, which may lead to the ignition or detonation. By comparing with the macroscale experimental measurements, the results presented here can help to develop a more accurate physical-related continuum model in the future. Moreover, this framework has important implications in understanding hot spot ignition processes and improving predictive capabilities in energetic materials.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105038633746
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:105038633746
T3 - Proceedings - 16th International Detonation Symposium, IDS 2018
SP - 1213
EP - 1220
BT - Proceedings - 16th International Detonation Symposium, IDS 2018
PB - Johns Hopkins University WSE Energetics Research Group
T2 - 16th International Detonation Symposium, IDS 2018
Y2 - 15 July 2018 through 20 July 2018
ER -