TY - JOUR
T1 - Large-scale molecular simulations of hypervelocity impact of materials
AU - Jaramillo-Botero, Andres
AU - An, Qi
AU - Theofanis, Patrick L.
AU - Goddard, William A.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was performed at the Caltech with partial support from the Department of Energy National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) under award number DE-FC52-08NA28613, Army Research Office (ARO) under award number W911NF-05-1-0345 and W911NF-08-1-0124, and the Office of Naval Research (ONR) under award number N00014-09-1-0634. Computations were carried out on the Los Alamos (LANL), Army HPC systems and the soft matter simulation CPU/GPU cluster at Caltech (NSF award 1040558). We thank Dr. Sergey Zybin for his input in the PETN work and Dr. Betsy Rice and Larry Davis for their assistance.
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - We describe the application of the ReaxFF reactive force field with short-range distance-dependent exponential inner wall corrections and the non-adiabatic electron Force Field (eFF) for studying the hypervelocity impact (HVI) effects on material properties. In particular, to understanding nonequilibrium energy/mass transfer, high strain/heat rate material decomposition, defects formation, plastic flow, phase transitions, and electronic excitation effects that arise from HVI impact of soft and hard materials on different material surfaces. Novel results are presented on the single shock Hugoniot and shock chemistry of Nylon6-6, on the hypervelocity shock sensitivity of energetic materials with planar interfacial defects and on HVI chemistry of silicon carbide surfaces with diamondoid nanoparticles. Both methods provide a means to elucidate the chemical, atomic and molecular processes that occur within the bulk and at the surfaces of materials subjected to HVI conditions and constitute a critical tool to enabling technologies required for the nextDgeneration of energy, spatial, transportation, medical, and military systems and devices, among many others. This has proven to be extremely challenging, if not impossible, for experimental observations, mainly because the material states that occur are hard to isolate and their time scales for changes are too rapid (<1 ps). First-principles quantum mechanics (QM) simulation methods have also been bounded by the prohibitive scaling cost of propagating the total Schrödinger equation for more than 100 atoms at finite temperatures and pressures.
AB - We describe the application of the ReaxFF reactive force field with short-range distance-dependent exponential inner wall corrections and the non-adiabatic electron Force Field (eFF) for studying the hypervelocity impact (HVI) effects on material properties. In particular, to understanding nonequilibrium energy/mass transfer, high strain/heat rate material decomposition, defects formation, plastic flow, phase transitions, and electronic excitation effects that arise from HVI impact of soft and hard materials on different material surfaces. Novel results are presented on the single shock Hugoniot and shock chemistry of Nylon6-6, on the hypervelocity shock sensitivity of energetic materials with planar interfacial defects and on HVI chemistry of silicon carbide surfaces with diamondoid nanoparticles. Both methods provide a means to elucidate the chemical, atomic and molecular processes that occur within the bulk and at the surfaces of materials subjected to HVI conditions and constitute a critical tool to enabling technologies required for the nextDgeneration of energy, spatial, transportation, medical, and military systems and devices, among many others. This has proven to be extremely challenging, if not impossible, for experimental observations, mainly because the material states that occur are hard to isolate and their time scales for changes are too rapid (<1 ps). First-principles quantum mechanics (QM) simulation methods have also been bounded by the prohibitive scaling cost of propagating the total Schrödinger equation for more than 100 atoms at finite temperatures and pressures.
KW - Electronically excited states dynamics
KW - Hypervelocity impact
KW - Non-adiabatic molecular dynamics
KW - Reactive molecular dynamics
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84891683874&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.proeng.2013.05.020
DO - 10.1016/j.proeng.2013.05.020
M3 - Conference article
AN - SCOPUS:84891683874
SN - 1877-7058
VL - 58
SP - 167
EP - 176
JO - Procedia Engineering
JF - Procedia Engineering
T2 - 12th Hypervelocity Impact Symposium, HVIS 2012
Y2 - 16 September 2012 through 20 September 2012
ER -