scholarly journals Uncertainty quantification of the reverse Taylor impact test and localized asynchronous space-time algorithm

Author(s):  
Waad Subber ◽  
Alberto Salvadori ◽  
Sangmin Lee ◽  
Karel Matouš
2012 ◽  
Vol 525-526 ◽  
pp. 377-380
Author(s):  
F. Xu ◽  
Wei Guo Guo ◽  
Q.J. Wang ◽  
Zhi Yin Zeng

In this paper, to determine the dynamic strength model for steels, a new approach which does not rely on the Hopkinson bar test has been proposed. As the DH36 steel for example, using the results of Taylor impact test and the quasi-static compression test, the initial parameters of Johnson-Cook plastic strength model have been fitted out, then the initial strength parameters have been optimized using the optimization techniques of the sparse Taylor impact cylinder. It has been shown that the optimized results in numerical simulation are consistent with results of Taylor impact test, and the optimized Johnson-Cook model can also well describe flow stress curve fitted from the Hopkinson bar test.


2012 ◽  
Vol 26 ◽  
pp. 01062 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Kruszka ◽  
Ł. Anaszewicz ◽  
J. Janiszewski ◽  
M. Grązka

2011 ◽  
Vol 673 ◽  
pp. 83-88 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hyung Seop Shin ◽  
Sung Su Park ◽  
Joon Hong Choi

The understanding of the deformation behavior of rubber materials under high strain-rate or high loading-rate conditions will be important in their impact applications adopting significant viscoelastic behavior. Taylor impact test has originally used to determine the average dynamic yield strength of metallic materials at high strain rates, but it also can be used to examine the overall deformation behavior of rubbers representing large elastic deformation by using a high-speed photography technique. Taylor impact tests of rubber materials were carried out in the velocity range between 100~250 m/s using a 20 mm air gun. In order to investigate the overall dynamic deformation behavior of rubber projectiles during Taylor impact test, a 8-Ch high-speed photography system which provides a series of images at each elapsed time was incorporated. Three kinds of rubber materials with different Tg (glass transition temperature) were supplied. The bulging behavior of rubber projectile could be evaluated quantitatively by digitizing images taken. Taylor impact tests at various temperature levels were conducted to predict the bulging behavior of rubbers at high strain rate.


Author(s):  
C. Hernandez ◽  
A. Maranon ◽  
I. A. Ashcroft ◽  
J. P. Casas-Rodriguez

Material characterization procedures are often complicated processes. In particular, dynamic material characterization usually requires many complicated and expensive tests. One of the tools used to characterize the behavior of materials under dynamic loading is the Taylor impact test. In this experiment, a flat-ended cylinder of initial uniform cross-sectional area is fired at a rigid target. The terminal geometry of the deformed cylinder is used to determine the material strength at different strain rates. This paper presents the formulation and solution of a first class inverse problem for the identification of the kinematic hardening material model from a Taylor impact test of a steel cylinder. The inverse problem is formulated as an optimization procedure for the determination of the optimal set of the model constants. The input parameter of the procedure is the final shape of a Taylor impact test specimen, in terms of central geometric moments, at a given impact velocity. The output parameters are the material model constants, which are determined by fitting the final shape of a numerically simulated Taylor specimen to the final shape of the experimental specimen. This optimization procedure is performed by a real-coded genetic algorithm. The paper includes a numerical example of the characterization procedure for a steel 1018 Taylor specimen of 8 mm diameter and 20 mm length, impacted at a velocity of 250 m/s. This simulation demonstrates the performance of the algorithm and the ability to estimate the kinematic hardening material model constants.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li Juncheng ◽  
Chen Gang ◽  
Lu Yonggang ◽  
Huang Fenglei

Taylor impact test is characterized by high impact energy, low cost, and good repeatability, giving it the technical foundation and development potential for application in high-g loading. In this paper, the feasibility of performing high-g load impact testing to a missile-borne recorder by conducting Taylor impact test was studied by combining simulation analyses with experimental verification. Acccording to the actual dimensions of the missile-borne recorder, an experimental piece was designed based on the Taylor impact principle. The impact loading characteristics of the missile-borne recorder were then simulated and analyzed at different impact velocities. In addition, the peak acceleration function and the pulse duration function of the load were fitted to guide the experimental design. A Taylor-Hopkinson impact experiment was also conducted to measure the impact load that was actually experienced by the missile-borne recorder and the results were compared with the results of strain measurements on the Hopkinson incident bar. The results showed that the peak value of impact load, the pulse duration and the waveform of the actual experimental results were in good agreement with the results predicted by the simulations. Additionally, the strain data measured on the incident bar could be used to verify or replace the acceleration testing of the specimen to simplify the experimental process required. Based on the impact velocity, high-g loading impact was achieved with peak values in the 7,000–30,000 g range and durations of 1.3–1 ms, and the waveform generated was a sawtooth wave. The research results provide a new approach for high amplitude and long pulse duration impact loading to large-mass components, and broaden the application field of Taylor impact test.


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