Experimental Characterization of Crackling Noise in Microplastic Regime of Bulk Metallic Materials
POSTER
Abstract
During plastic flow, metallic materials deform through collective dislocation activities, and exhibits mechanical fluctuation, i.e. crackling noise. Micro-plastic deformation, associated with smaller dislocation activities prior to nominal yielding, has been detected in sub-micron-scale single crystals. Such mechanical noises, arising in metallic materials subjected to nominal elastic stress excitations, can be a relevant problem for instrumentation that requires high strain sensitivity, e.g., gravitational wave detectors like Advanced LIGO. In this study, we endeavor to detect and characterize the mechanical up-converted crackling noise in macroscopic samples. An instrument has been custom-built based on a Michelson interferometer. It has achieved an ultra-high displacement noise resolution of 1e-14 m/sqrt(Hz) in the frequency range of 10~1000 Hz. We resolved a stress-modulated noise in a pair of cm-scale maraging steel spring cantilevers under nominal elastic loading. The characteristics of the noise resemble those of the micro-plastic noise predicted from micro-mechanical simulations developed based on the microscopic experiments.
*We gratefully acknowledge the financial support from DOE, NSF, and LIGO.
Presenters
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Xiaoyue Ni
- Division of Engineering and Applied Sciences, California Institute of Technology