TITEL
Displacement field measurement using digital speckle photography for characterisation of materials subjected to large deformations and high strain rates
FöRFATTARE
Kajberg, Jörgen
DATUM
2003-11-05
INSTITUTION
Tillämpad fysik, maskin- och materialteknik / Hållfasthetslära
SAMMANFATTNING
In many technical processes, material is deformed under conditions
involving large deformations (strains) and/or high strain rates. Examples
of such processes are collisions, impact, penetration, metal forming,
powder compaction and crack propagation. For description of these kinds of
situations a variety of constitutive models, based on both physical
foundations and empirical considerations, is available. Common for all
models is that they contain material parameters, which have to be estimated
by utilising experimental methods.
For material characterisation under quasi-static conditions standardised
tension tests of uniaxially loaded specimens are commonly used. With these
tests stress-strain relations are obtained up to moderate strain values,
whereupon the onset of strain localisation, so-called necking, restricts
their validities. Correction methods have been developed to compensate for
the onset of necking (e.g. Bridgman's correction method for round bars).
The Taylor impact test and the split Hopkinson bar arrangement are
frequently used methods for the investigation of incompressible (volume
conserving) materials in the high strain rate regime. Typically, the
specimens are short and stubby cylinders, which ideally facilitate a
homogeneous state of loading necessary for a simple interpretation of the
experimental results.
In this thesis a methodology is suggested for characterisation of materials
subjected to large deformations and high strain rates, where neither
homogeneously loaded specimens nor incompressible behaviour are necessary.
Experimental methods similar to standardised tension tests and split
Hopkinson bar arrangement are complemented with an optical method, digital
speckle photography (DSP), for in-plane point-wise displacement and strain
measurements. By using a common digital camera in the former tests and a
high-speed camera with a CCD-unit (Charged Coupled Device) in the latter
tests digitised images are obtained for the method of DSP.
An inverse method is used to estimate the material parameters in
constitutive models. Three-dimensional numerical simulations of the
specimens are performed by the finite element method (FEM). By adjusting
the parameters to give a best fit between experimental and numerical
results (displacements and strains) in least-square sense optimal values
are obtained.
In the quasi-static tension tests true strain values up to 0.8 were
obtained for a hot-rolled steel. The mild steel specimens in the high
strain rate tests were subjected to strain rates of magnitudes 10^2-10^3
1/s.
ISSN 1402-1544 / ISRN LTU-DT--03/35--SE / NR 2003:35
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