The strength behavior of granulated silicon carbide at high strain rates and confining pressure

The dynamic Mohr–Coulomb behavior of silicon carbide (SiC) was inferred from symmetric pressure/shear plate‐impact experiments which entail planar impact of two SiC plates inclined at 15° to the impact direction. The transverse velocity of the free rear surface of the target plate was recorded using a laser Doppler velocimeter system, and the experiments were simulated using a postulated viscoplastic constitutive model that accounts for comminution and dilatancy. Model parameters were varied until the computed and measured velocity histories agreed. The results indicate that comminution occurred soon after loading, and thus the experiment measures the behavior of granulated material at shear strain rates of ≊105 s−1 and mean stress ranging from 1 to 9 GPa. A friction coefficient of 0.23 was obtained, which is about half the value for quasistatic compression of precomminuted ceramic reported in the literature. The simulation results were strongly affected by the values chosen for the friction coefficient a...