Two types of Mg-Cu composition system graded density impactors used for complex loading (shock loading and quasi-isentropic compression) are designed by the elastic-plastic hydrodynamic method in this paper. Mixture...Two types of Mg-Cu composition system graded density impactors used for complex loading (shock loading and quasi-isentropic compression) are designed by the elastic-plastic hydrodynamic method in this paper. Mixtures of metal powders in the Mg-Cu system are cast into a series of 17 and 25 uniform compositions ranging from 100% Mg to 100% Cu. The graded den- sity impactors are launched to the stationary 10 Ixm aluminum film and 12 mm LiF window targets by a two-stage light-gas gun in the National Key Laboratory for Shock Wave and Detonation Physics Research, Institute of Fluid Physics, CAEP, and the resulting wave profiles are measured with the DISAR system. Hydrodynamic simulation results are perfectly consistent with the experiments. Our work in this paper will set up a foundation for further research of controllable loading/releasing routes and rate experiments in the future.展开更多
基金supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 11072228, 11002129)the Science Foundation of China Academy of Engineering Physics (Grant No. 2011B0202005)+1 种基金the Open Foundation of State Key Laboratory of Explosion Science and Technology(Grant No. KFJJ09-06)the Open Foundation of State Key Laboratory of Advanced Technology for Materials Synthesis and Process-ing, Wuhan University of Technology
文摘Two types of Mg-Cu composition system graded density impactors used for complex loading (shock loading and quasi-isentropic compression) are designed by the elastic-plastic hydrodynamic method in this paper. Mixtures of metal powders in the Mg-Cu system are cast into a series of 17 and 25 uniform compositions ranging from 100% Mg to 100% Cu. The graded den- sity impactors are launched to the stationary 10 Ixm aluminum film and 12 mm LiF window targets by a two-stage light-gas gun in the National Key Laboratory for Shock Wave and Detonation Physics Research, Institute of Fluid Physics, CAEP, and the resulting wave profiles are measured with the DISAR system. Hydrodynamic simulation results are perfectly consistent with the experiments. Our work in this paper will set up a foundation for further research of controllable loading/releasing routes and rate experiments in the future.