Abstract

The purpose of this work is to provide theoretical framework and experimental supporting evidence for a crucial role of structural transitions in the ensemble of defects at the meso-level (microshears and microcracks), as one of the mechanisms of plastic strain localization in metals under high-rate loading.The investigation of the sample response to dynamic loading was carried out on the split Hopkinson pressure bar and in a series of target penetration tests. To identify the characteristic stages of strain localization, the thermodynamics of the deformation process was investigated "in-situ" by recording the temperature fields using a high-speed infrared camera CEDIP Silver 450M.The temperature measured in the localization zone does not confirm the generally accepted concept of the strain localization mechanism as the mechanism governed by a thermoplastic instability. The samples stored after the experiment were subjected to microstructural analysis, using an optical interferometer-profilometer and a scanning electron microscope. The structural analysis revealed a correlated behavior of the ensemble of defects, which can be classified as a structural transition providing strain localization.The data of experimental studies, the examination of the structure of deformed samples, as well as the data of numerical modeling taking into account the kinetics of accumulation of microdefects in the material suggest that one of the mechanisms of plastic strain localization at high loading rates is associated with the jump-like processes in the defect ensemble with pronounced orientation.

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