Shock-wave studies of anomalous compressibility of glassy carbon


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Abstract

The physico-mechanical properties of amorphous glassy carbon are investigated under shock compression up to 10 GPa. Experiments are carried out on the continuous recording of the mass velocity of compression pulses propagating in glassy carbon samples with initial densities of 1.502(5) g/cm3 and 1.55(2) g/cm3. It is shown that, in both cases, a compression wave in glassy carbon contains a leading precursor with amplitude of 0.135(5) GPa. It is established that, in the range of pressures up to 2 GPa, a shock discontinuity in glassy carbon is transformed into a broadened compression wave, and shock waves are formed in the release wave, which generally means the anomalous compressibility of the material in both the compression and release waves. It is shown that, at pressure higher than 3 GPa, anomalous behavior turns into normal behavior, accompanied by the formation of a shock compression wave. In the investigated area of pressure, possible structural changes in glassy carbon under shock compression have a reversible character. A physico-mechanical model of glassy carbon is proposed that involves the equation of state and a constitutive relation for Poisson’s ratio and allows the numerical simulation of physico-mechanical and thermophysical properties of glassy carbon of different densities in the region of its anomalous compressibility.

About the authors

A. M. Molodets

Institute of Problems of Chemical Physics

Author for correspondence.
Email: molodets@icp.ac.ru
Russian Federation, pr. Akademika Semenova 1, Chernogolovka, Moscow oblast, 142432

A. A. Golyshev

Institute of Problems of Chemical Physics

Email: molodets@icp.ac.ru
Russian Federation, pr. Akademika Semenova 1, Chernogolovka, Moscow oblast, 142432

A. S. Savinykh

Institute of Problems of Chemical Physics; Tomsk State University

Email: molodets@icp.ac.ru
Russian Federation, pr. Akademika Semenova 1, Chernogolovka, Moscow oblast, 142432; pr. Lenina 36, Tomsk, 634050

V. V. Kim

Institute of Problems of Chemical Physics

Email: molodets@icp.ac.ru
Russian Federation, pr. Akademika Semenova 1, Chernogolovka, Moscow oblast, 142432

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