2022
DOI: 10.1063/5.0088994
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The Texas A&M University Hypervelocity Impact Laboratory: A modern aeroballistic range facility

Abstract: Novel engineering materials and structures are increasingly designed for use in severe environments involving extreme transient variations in temperature and loading rates, chemically reactive flows, and other conditions. The Texas A&M University Hypervelocity Impact Laboratory (HVIL) enables unique ultrahigh-rate materials characterization, testing, and modeling capabilities by tightly integrating expertise in high-rate materials behavior, computational and polymer chemistry, and multi-physics multiscale … Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
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“…As such, there is a need to better understand the behavior of these materials in order to engineer the next generation of materials that will fulfill these applications. While machine-learning aided materials informatics promises to dramatically accelerate materials design and discovery ( 2 ), validating materials characterization and performance through standard high-strain-rate testing techniques, i.e., plate impact ( 3 ), split Hopkinson bar ( 4 6 ), and gas gun impact ( 7 ), still remains a bottleneck in the high-strain-rate materials design cycle due to the low throughput nature and high cost of these testing techniques. In this regard, high-strain-rate nanoindentation has recently emerged as a potentially useful high-throughput testing technique ( 8 ), but it remains unclear whether small-scale measurements adequately capture material deformation behavior at macroscopic scales ( 9 12 ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As such, there is a need to better understand the behavior of these materials in order to engineer the next generation of materials that will fulfill these applications. While machine-learning aided materials informatics promises to dramatically accelerate materials design and discovery ( 2 ), validating materials characterization and performance through standard high-strain-rate testing techniques, i.e., plate impact ( 3 ), split Hopkinson bar ( 4 6 ), and gas gun impact ( 7 ), still remains a bottleneck in the high-strain-rate materials design cycle due to the low throughput nature and high cost of these testing techniques. In this regard, high-strain-rate nanoindentation has recently emerged as a potentially useful high-throughput testing technique ( 8 ), but it remains unclear whether small-scale measurements adequately capture material deformation behavior at macroscopic scales ( 9 12 ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%