Understanding Microstructure Variability in Vapor-Deposited Energetic Materials by Using Phase-Field Methods [electronic resource]

Critical components, such as detonators, in Sandia's stockpile contain heterogeneous materials whose performance and reliability depend on accurate, predictive models of coupled, complex phenomena to predict their synthesis, processing, and operation. Ongoing research in energetic materials has...

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Online Access: Full Text (via OSTI)
Corporate Author: Sandia National Laboratories (Researcher)
Format: Government Document Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: Washington, D.C. : Oak Ridge, Tenn. : United States. National Nuclear Security Administration ; Distributed by the Office of Scientific and Technical Information, U.S. Department of Energy, 2020.
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Summary:Critical components, such as detonators, in Sandia's stockpile contain heterogeneous materials whose performance and reliability depend on accurate, predictive models of coupled, complex phenomena to predict their synthesis, processing, and operation. Ongoing research in energetic materials has shown that microstructural properties, such as density, pore-size, morphology, and specific surface area are correlated to their initiation threshold and detonation behavior. However, experiments to study these specific characteristics of energetic materials are challenging and time consuming. Therefore, in this work, we turn to mesoscale modeling methods that may be capable of reproducing some observed phenomena to refine and predict outcomes beforehand. Even so, we have no physics-based modeling capability to predict how the microstructure of an energetic material will evolve over near- and long-term time scales. Thus, the goal of this work is to (i) identify any knowledge gaps in how the underlying microstructure forms and evolves during the synthesis process, and (ii) develop and test a mesoscale phase-field model for vapor deposition to capture critical mechanisms of microstructure formation, evolution, and variability in vapor-deposited energetic materials, such as processing conditions, material properties, and substrate interactions. Based on this work, the phase-field method is shown to be a valuable tool for developing the necessary models containing coupled, complex phenomena to investigate and understand the synthesis and processing of energetic materials.
Item Description:Published through Scitech Connect.
09/30/2020.
"SAND-2020-10255R."
"Other: 690913."
Stewart, James Allen ; Damm, David Lee ; Dingreville, Remi Philippe Michel ; Hamilton, Parker Kip ;
Physical Description:Size: 15 p. : digital, PDF file.