Publication | Closed Access
Hopkinson techniques for dynamic recovery experiments
437
Citations
10
References
1991
Year
The study introduces new techniques to adapt the split Hopkinson bar for dynamic recovery experiments, enabling samples to receive a single, shaped pulse and then be recovered for post‑test analysis. The apparatus generates a compressive pulse followed by tensile pulses, so the sample experiences only a single, shape‑controlled compressive load, and for tension recovery it traps the reflected compression pulse while transmitting the tensile pulse. The technique permits compression–tension sequences with recovery, enabling investigation of dynamic Bauschinger effects.
Novel techniques are introduced to render the classical split Hopkinson bar apparatus suitable for dynamic recovery experiments, where samples can be subjected to a single pulse of pre-assigned shape and duration, and then recovered without any additional loading, for post-test characterization; i. e., techniques for fully controlled unloading in Hopkinson bar experiments. For compression dynamic recovery tests, the new design generates a compressive pulse trailed by a tensile pulse (stress reversal), travelling toward the sample. Furthermore, all subsequent pulses which reflect off the free ends of the two bars (incident and transmission) are rendered tensile, so that the sample is subjected to a single compressive pulse whose shape and duration can also be controlled. For tension recovery experiments, the new design provides for trapping the compression pulse reflected off the sample, and the tensile pulse transmitted through the sample. In addition, a sample can be subjected to compression followed by tension, and then recovered, allowing the study of, e. g. the dynamic Bauschinger effect in materials.
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