A numerical exploration of the role of void geometry on void collapse and hot spot formation in ductile materials

Abstract An Eulerian hydrocode was used to simulate the dynamic void collapse in OFHC copper, modeled with the Johnson–Cook (Johnson, G.R., Cook, W.H., 1985. Engineering Fracture Mechanics 21(1), 31) material model and the Cruneisen equation of state, to study hot spot formation and jetting. The computational techniques were first validated by a comparison to a series of two-dimensional experiments. The effect of the planar and axisymmetric geometries on the hot spot temperature and jet velocity in circular voids is explored. In addition, the effect of the apex angle in triangular voids on jetting and hot spot formation is studied. An effective apex angle for the highly nonspherical voids formed in closely packed circular particles is calculated.