Publication | Closed Access
Experimental observations on the links between surface perturbation parameters and shock-induced mass ejection
95
Citations
34
References
2014
Year
EngineeringImpact (Mechanics)Fluid MechanicsGeophysicsIrregular Shaped PerturbationsMechanicsNumerical SimulationHypervelocity ImpactExperimental ObservationsInstrumentationBlast LoadingShock CompressionPhysicsPeriodic PerturbationsSurface Perturbation ParametersIsosceles PerturbationDetonation PhenomenonStructural GeologyAerospace EngineeringSeismologyApplied PhysicsUnderwater ExplosionShock-induced Mass Ejection
We have assembled together our ejecta measurements from explosively shocked tin acquired over a period of about ten years. The tin was cast at 0.99995 purity, and all of the tin targets or samples were shocked to loading pressures of about 27 GPa, allowing meaningful comparisons. The collected data are markedly consistent, and because the total ejected mass scales linearly with the perturbations amplitudes they can be used to estimate how much total Sn mass will be ejected from explosively shocked Sn, at similar loading pressures, based on the surface perturbation parameters of wavelength and amplitude. Most of the data were collected from periodic isosceles shapes that approximate sinusoidal perturbations. Importantly, however, we find that not all periodic perturbations behave similarly. For example, we observed that sawtooth (right triangular) perturbations eject more mass than an isosceles perturbation of similar depth and wavelength, demonstrating that masses ejected from irregular shaped perturbations cannot be normalized to the cross-sectional areas of the perturbations.
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