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Diffraction Microscopes to Capture Shock-Induced Plasticity

ORAL

Abstract

The microscopic origins of how plastic failure starts during shock waves is poorly understood, especially at the atomic scale. Limited techniques can measure the ultrafast and apparently stochastic dynamics required to uniquely describe how localized shear, hotspots and stresses can drive the elastic compression at 108 strain rates to induce kinetically dominated plasticity. My group is developing ultrafast X-ray microscopes with crystallographic contrast to measure plasticity across length- and time-scales. Using X-ray topography and dark-field X-ray microscopy, we collect images along the X-ray diffracted beam (i.e. Diffraction Contrast Microscopy, DCM) that resolve the long-range strain and misorientation fields that emanate from defect cores that project onto that crystallographic plane. In this way, we have been able to resolve the dynamics of dislocation patterning, the evolution of dislocation densities, and discrete dislocation avalanches. In this talk, I will introduce our optical, analytical, and theory framework for DCM in dynamic compression. I will describe our optical developments at XFELs that allow us to image shock mechanics with 2-0.15 μm resolution across hundreds of micrometers. I will then discuss the computer-vision tools we have developed to quantify the information about specific types of defect structures in our images, using simulations we have developed to predict DCM images for DDD-predicted defect structures. With this framework, I will show how our new tools are starting to shed light into shock-induced plasticity and strength in diamond – with experiments we performed at the Linac Coherent Light Source. Our new approach holds key opportunities to map out the potential energy landscape of the kinetically dominated plasticity observed in shock physics.

Presenters

  • Leora E Dresselhaus-Marais

    Stanford University, Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab

Authors

  • Leora E Dresselhaus-Marais

    Stanford University, Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab

  • Henning F Poulsen

    Technical University of Denmark

  • Kristoffer Haldrup

    Technical University of Denmark

  • Marylesa Howard

    Nevada National Security Site

  • Youssef Marzouk

    MIT

  • Grethe Winther

    Technical University of Denmark

  • Robert E Rudd

    Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab

  • Jon H Eggert

    Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

  • Cara Vennari

    Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab

  • Matthew H Seaberg

    SLAC - Natl Accelerator Lab

  • Tim van Driel

    SLAC National Accelerator Lab

  • Kento Katagiri

    Osaka Univ

  • Dimitri Khaghani

    SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, SLAC National Accelerator Lab, SLAC - Natl Accelerator Lab

  • Norimasa Ozaki

    Osaka Univ

  • Bernard Kozioziemski

    Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab

  • Nicolas Bertin

    Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory