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91探花
First HED experiment at XFEL

Professor Justin Wark

Professor of Physics

Sub department

  • Atomic and Laser Physics

Research groups

  • 91探花 Centre for High Energy Density Science (OxCHEDS)
Justin.Wark@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)72251
Clarendon Laboratory, room 029.9
  • About
  • Publications

Kinematics of plasticity-induced rotation during shock or ramp compression to extreme pressures

Morressier (2022)

Authors:

Justin Wark, Patrick Heighway

Slip competition and rotation suppression in tantalum and copper during dynamic uniaxial compression

Morressier (2022)

Authors:

Patrick Heighway, Justin Wark

Author Correction: Metastability of diamond ramp-compressed to 2 terapascals

Nature Springer Nature 605:7909 (2022) e1-e1

Authors:

A Lazicki, D McGonegle, JR Rygg, DG Braun, DC Swift, MG Gorman, RF Smith, PG Heighway, A Higginbotham, MJ Suggit, DE Fratanduono, F Coppari, CE Wehrenberg, RG Kraus, D Erskine, JV Bernier, JM McNaney, RE Rudd, GW Collins, JH Eggert, JS Wark

Slip competition and rotation suppression in tantalum and copper during dynamic uniaxial compression

Physical Review Materials American Physical Society 6 (2022) 043605

Abstract:

When compressed, a metallic specimen will generally experience changes to its crystallographic texture due to plasticity-induced rotation. Ultrafast x-ray diffraction techniques make it possible to measure rotation of this kind in targets dynamically compressed over nanosecond timescales to the kind of pressures ordinarily encountered in planetary interiors. The axis and the extent of the local rotation can provide hints as to the combination of plasticity mechanisms activated by the rapid uniaxial compression, thus providing valuable information about the underlying dislocation kinetics operative during extreme loading conditions. We present large-scale molecular dynamics simulations of shock-induced lattice rotation in three model crystals whose behavior has previously been characterized in dynamic-compression experiments: tantalum shocked along its [101] direction, and copper shocked along either [001] or [111]. We find that, in all three cases, the texture changes predicted by the simulations are consistent with those measured experimentally using in situ x-ray diffraction. We show that while tantalum loaded along [101] and copper loaded along [001] both show pronounced rotation due to asymmetric multiple slip, the orientation of copper shocked along [111] is predicted to be stabilized by opposing rotations arising from competing, symmetrically equivalent slip systems.

Femtosecond Diffraction and Dynamic High Pressure Science

(2022)

Authors:

Justin S Wark, Malcolm I McMahon, Jon H Eggert

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