High strain rate deformation of layered nanocomposites

Bullet-proof materials made of nanostructured composites outperform conventional materials, yet little is known of their nanoscale response to high-speed impact. Using laser-propelled microscopic projectiles, Lee et al. directly visualize this process in layered nanocomposites. Insight into the mech...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2012-11, Vol.3 (1), p.1164, Article 1164
Hauptverfasser: Lee, Jae-Hwang, Veysset, David, Singer, Jonathan P., Retsch, Markus, Saini, Gagan, Pezeril, Thomas, Nelson, Keith A., Thomas, Edwin L.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Bullet-proof materials made of nanostructured composites outperform conventional materials, yet little is known of their nanoscale response to high-speed impact. Using laser-propelled microscopic projectiles, Lee et al. directly visualize this process in layered nanocomposites. Insight into the mechanical behaviour of nanomaterials under the extreme condition of very high deformation rates and to very large strains is needed to provide improved understanding for the development of new protective materials. Applications include protection against bullets for body armour, micrometeorites for satellites, and high-speed particle impact for jet engine turbine blades. Here we use a microscopic ballistic test to report the responses of periodic glassy-rubbery layered block-copolymer nanostructures to impact from hypervelocity micron-sized silica spheres. Entire deformation fields are experimentally visualized at an exceptionally high resolution (below 10 nm) and we discover how the microstructure dissipates the impact energy via layer kinking, layer compression, extreme chain conformational flattening, domain fragmentation and segmental mixing to form a liquid phase. Orientation-dependent experiments show that the dissipation can be enhanced by 30% by proper orientation of the layers.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/ncomms2166