论文标题
RDX晶粒形状对通过中尺度建模创建热点的影响
Influence of the shape of RDX grains on the creation of hot spots by mesoscale modeling
论文作者
论文摘要
CEA-Gramat研究能量材料的敏感性以提高其安全性和可靠性。必须理解导致爆炸物启动的条件以控制其敏感性。根据热点理论,异质爆炸物的休克开始与它们的微观结构有关:冲击与微结构的异质性相互作用(孔和夹杂物,谷物和碎片的形态,剥离等),并产生局部能量沉积。为了描述这些热点,必须以允许其微观结构离散化的规模对能量材料进行建模:中尺度。在CEA-Gramat上进行了能量材料的微型扫描仪,并进行了分析以构建用于有限元模拟的几何模型。研究了两种模型: - 真实模型直接建立在从微型层压仪中提取的真实微观结构上。虚拟模型基于相同的微观结构,但简化以独立研究微结构参数的影响(粒度测定法,孔隙率,孔隙度,孔隙,填充物含量{\ ldots})对斑点的创建。通过数值模拟研究了基于惰性粘合剂中不同类型的RDX颗粒的组成。在中尺度研究了粒子形状对惰性冲击反应的影响。压力和温度场的局部异质性似乎与微结构的形态特性密切相关。边缘锋利的颗粒比球形颗粒产生的热点更多。
CEA-Gramat studies the sensitivity of energetic materials to enhance their security and reliability. The conditions leading to the initiation of an explosive must be understood to control its sensitivity. According to the hot spots theory, the shock initiation of heterogeneous explosives is related to their microstructure: the shock interacts with the heterogeneities of the microstructure (pores and inclusions, morphology of grains and fragments, debonding, etc.) and creates local deposits of energy. To describe these hot spots, energetic materials have to be modeled at a scale allowing the discretization of their microstructure: the mesoscale. Micro-computed tomographies of energetic materials are done at CEA-Gramat and analyzed to build geometric models used in finite element simulations. Two kinds of models are studied:-Real models are directly built on the real microstructures extracted from micro-computed tomographies.-Virtual models are based on the same microstructures but simplified to study independently the effects of microstructural parameters (granulometry, porosity, filler content{\ldots}) on the creation of hot spots. Compositions based on different kind of RDX particles in an inert binder are studied through numerical simulation. The influence of particle shape on the inert shock response is investigated at the mesoscale. Local heterogeneities of pressure and temperature fields appear intimately related to the morphological properties of the microstructures. Particles with sharp edges create more hot spots than spherical particles.