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Indentation of aluminium foam at low velocity

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conference contribution
posted on 2024-07-09, 17:56 authored by Xiaopeng Shi, Yinggang Miao, Shuangyan Liu, Yulong Li, Guoxing Lu
The indentation behaviour of aluminium foams at low velocity (10 m/s ∼ 30 m/s) was investigated both in experiments and numerical simulation in this paper. A flat-ended indenter was used and the force-displacement history was recorded. The Split Hopkinson Pressure bar was used to obtain the indentation velocity and forces in the dynamic experiments. Because of the low strength of the aluminium foam, PMMA bar was used, and the experimental data were corrected using Bacon's method. The energy absorption characteristics varying with impact velocity were then obtained. It was found that the energy absorption ability of aluminium foam gradually increases in the quasi-static regime and shows a significant increase at ∼10 m/s velocity. Numerical simulation was also conducted to investigate this process. A 3D Voronoi model was used and models with different relative densities were investigated as well as those with different failure strain. The indentation energy increases with both the relative density and failure strain. The analysis of the FE model implies that the significant change in energy absorption ability of aluminium foam in indentation at ∼10 m/s velocity may be caused by plastic wave effect.

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ISBN

9782759818174

ISSN

2100-014X

Journal title

11th International Conference on the Mechanical and Physical Behaviour of Materials under Dynamic Loading (DYMAT 2015)

Conference name

11th International Conference on the Mechanical and Physical Behaviour of Materials under Dynamic Loading (DYMAT 2015)

Location

Lugano

Start date

2015-09-07

End date

2049-12-31

Volume

94

Pagination

04032-

Publisher

EDP Sciences

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2015 Owned by The authors, published by EDP Sciences. This an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Language

eng

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