Abstract

The transient response resulting from an impact wave on an elastic bimaterial, made out of a “hard” medium and a “soft” medium, welded at a spherical interface, have been investigated by using an integral transform technique. This technique permits isolation of the pressure and shear waves contributions to the wave field. The method of solution makes use of the generalized ray/Cagniard-de Hoop (GR/CdH) method associated with a “flattening approximation” (FA) technique, similar to the Earth flattening transformation used in geophysics. The GR/CdH method and the FA technique are briefly presented, together with their numerical implementations. The FA has proved to be useful in geophysical application, however, as far as the authors know, it has never been investigated for other applications. For the purpose of this paper, numerous tests of the method have been performed in order to check that the FA is appropriate to compute transient responses in the special case presented here. We could determine appropriate values for some parameters involved in the FA. This paper follows Grimal et al. [Int. J. Solid Struct. 39 (2002) 5345] in which we investigated the same bimaterial with a plane––instead of spherical––interface. Numerical examples are concerned with the propagation of an impact wave in the thorax modeled as a bimaterial (thoracic wall-lung). In addition to the effects of the weak coupling of the two media already observed in our previous study, we found that, for interface curvatures characteristic of those measured in the thorax, focalization of energy is manifest.

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