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Chao, Tong Wa (2004-03-10) Gaseous detonation-driven fracture of tubes. http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-04062004-165940


Type of Document Dissertation
Author Chao, Tong Wa
URN etd-04062004-165940
Persistent URL http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-04062004-165940
Title Gaseous detonation-driven fracture of tubes
Degree PhD
Option Aeronautics
Advisory Committee
Advisor Name Title
Wolfgang G. Knauss Committee Chair
Guruswami Ravichandran Committee Member
James L. Beck Committee Member
Joseph E. Shepherd Committee Member
Kaushik Bhattacharya Committee Member
Keywords
  • crack branching
  • crack curving
  • detonation
  • fracture
  • tube
  • pipe
  • crack
Date of Defense 2004-03-10
Availability unrestricted
Abstract
An experimental investigation of fracture response of aluminum 6061-T6 tubes under internal gaseous detonation loading has been carried out. The pressure load, with speeds exceeding 2 km/s, can be characterized as a pressure peak (ranging from 2 to 6 MPa) followed by an expansion wave. The unique combination of this particular traveling load and tube geometry produced fracture data not available before in the open literature. Experimental data of this type are useful for studying the fluid-structure-fracture interaction and various crack curving and branching phenomena, and also for validation for multi-physics and multi-scale modeling.

Axial surface flaws were introduced to control the crack initiation site. Fracture threshold models were developed by combining a static fracture model and an extensively studied dynamic amplification factor for tubes under internal traveling loads. Experiments were also performed on hydrostatically loaded preflawed aluminum 6061-T6 tubes for comparison. Significantly different fracture behavior was observed and the difference was explained by fluid dynamics and energy considerations. The experiments yielded comparison on crack speeds, strain, and pressure histories.

In other experiments, the specimens were also pre-torqued to control the propagation direction of the cracks. Measurements were made on the detonation velocity, strain history, blast pressure from the crack opening, and crack speeds. The curved crack paths were digitized. The Chapman-Jouguet pressure, initial axial flaw length, and torsion level were varied to obtain different crack patterns. The incipient crack kinking angle was found to be consistent with fracture under mixed-mode loading. High-speed movies of the fracture events and blast wave were taken and these were used in interpreting the quantitative data.

Numerical simulations were performed using the commercial explicit finite-element software LS-Dyna. The detonation wave was modeled as a traveling boundary load. Both non-fracturing linear elastic simulations and elastoplastic simulations with fracture were conducted on three-dimensional models. The simulated fracture was compared directly with an experiment with the same conditions. The overall qualitative fracture behavior was captured by the simulation. The forward and backward cracks were observed to branch in both the experiment and simulation.

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