Hierarchical Multiscale Framework for Materials Modeling: Advances in Scale-Bridging Applied to a Taylor Anvil Impact Test of RDX

ORAL

Abstract

As part of a multiscale modeling effort, we present progress on a challenge in continuum-scale modeling: the direct incorporation of complex molecular-level processes in the constitutive evaluation. In this initial phase of the research we use a concurrent scale-bridging approach, with a hierarchical multiscale framework running in parallel to couple a particle-based model (the "lower scale") computing the equation of state (EOS) to the constitutive response in a finite-element multi-physics simulation (the "upper scale"). The lower scale simulations of 1,3,5-trinitroperhydro-1,3,5-triazine (RDX) use a force-matched coarse-grain model and dissipative particle dynamics methods, and the upper scale simulation is of a Taylor anvil impact experiment. Results emphasize use of adaptive sampling (via dynamic kriging) that accelerates time to solution, and its comparison to fully "on the fly" runs. Work towards inclusion of a fully reactive EOS is also discussed.

Authors

  • Brian Barnes

    US Army Research Laboratory

  • Kenneth Leiter

    US Army Research Laboratory

  • Richard Becker

    Army Research Laboratory, US Army Research Laboratory

  • Jaroslaw Kanp

    US Army Research Laboratory

  • John Brennan

    US Army Research Laboratory