Publication | Open Access
Shock compression behaviors of boron carbide (B4C)
76
Citations
14
References
2006
Year
EngineeringMechanical EngineeringSoft MatterStructural MaterialsMechanics ModelingElasticity (Physics)RheologySolidificationBoron CarbideShock CompressionMaterials ScienceStrain LocalizationMechanical BehaviorSolid MechanicsMaterial MechanicsPlasticityMechanical DeformationParticle VelocityMechanical PropertiesMaterials CharacterizationApplied Physics–Particle VelocityMechanics Of MaterialsCarbideHigh Strain Rate
Hugoniot measurements on the highly dense, pure B4C polycrystal were performed by the inclined-mirror method to study the elastoplastic transition and to search phase transition. In inclined-mirror streak photographs, the smoothly jagged structure was observed at the free-surface shape in the plastic region. The Hugoniot-elastic limit (HEL) has been determined to be approximately 19.5GPa. In the plastic region, a kink was observed at a particle velocity of around 1.26km∕s. The shock velocity (US)–particle velocity (UP) Hugoniot relations in the plastic region were given by US=3.7+5.4UPkm∕s in the Up range of 0.54–1.26km∕s and US=9.61+0.73UPkm∕s in the Up range of 1.26–4.3km∕s. The S value (0.73) in US=C0+SUP above UP=1.26km∕s is significantly small compared with the result of Vogler et al. [J. Appl. Phys. 95, 4173 (2004)], and was much smaller than those of many oxides and nitrides. This material behaved as an elastoisotropic solid above the HEL and showed a large and linear change in the pressure-density plot above 38GPa (UP=1.26km∕s), which indicated the onset of a phase transition.
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