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Dive into the research topics where Jesus O. Mares is active.

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Featured researches published by Jesus O. Mares.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2013

Thermal and mechanical response of PBX 9501 under contact excitation

Jesus O. Mares; Jacob K. Miller; Nathan Sharp; David S. Moore; Douglas E. Adams; Lori J. Groven; Jeffrey F. Rhoads; Steven F. Son

The thermal and mechanical responses of a cyclotetramethylene-tetranitramine-based explosive (PBX 9501) and two non-energetic mock materials (900-21 and PBS 9501) under high-frequency mechanical excitation are presented. Direct contact ultrasound transducers were used to excite samples through a frequency range of 50 kHz to 40 MHz. The mechanical response of each sample was approximated from a contact receiving transducer and trends were confirmed via laser Doppler vibrometry. The steady-state thermal response of the samples was measured at discrete excitation frequencies via infrared thermography. A maximum temperature rise of approximately 15 K was observed in PBX 9501, and the mock materials exhibited similar thermal characteristics. Temperature gradients were calculated to estimate the total heat generated within the samples due to the mechanical excitation. The active heating mechanisms were found to be highly dependent on the frequency of excitation. Possible mechanisms of heating at frequencies bel...


Applied Physics Letters | 2016

High speed X-ray phase contrast imaging of energetic composites under dynamic compression

Niranjan D. Parab; Z. A. Roberts; Michael Harr; Jesus O. Mares; Alex D. Casey; I. Emre Gunduz; Matthew Hudspeth; Benjamin Claus; Tao Sun; Kamel Fezzaa; Steven F. Son; Weinong W. Chen

Fracture of crystals and frictional heating are associated with the formation of “hot spots” (localized heating) in energetic composites such as polymer bonded explosives (PBXs). Traditional high speed optical imaging methods cannot be used to study the dynamic sub-surface deformation and the fracture behavior of such materials due to their opaque nature. In this study, high speed synchrotron X-ray experiments are conducted to visualize the in situ deformation and the fracture mechanisms in PBXs composed of octahydro-1,3,5,7-tetranitro-1,3,5,7-tetrazocine (HMX) crystals and hydroxyl-terminated polybutadiene binder doped with iron (III) oxide. A modified Kolsky bar apparatus was used to apply controlled dynamic compression on the PBX specimens, and a high speed synchrotron X-ray phase contrast imaging (PCI) setup was used to record the in situ deformation and failure in the specimens. The experiments show that synchrotron X-ray PCI provides a sufficient contrast between the HMX crystals and the doped binde...


Journal of Applied Physics | 2014

Heat generation in an elastic binder system with embedded discrete energetic particles due to high-frequency, periodic mechanical excitation

Jesus O. Mares; Jacob K. Miller; Ibrahim Emre Gunduz; Jeffrey F. Rhoads; Steven F. Son

High-frequency mechanical excitation can induce heating within energetic materials and may lead to advances in explosives detection and defeat. In order to examine the nature of this mechanically induced heating, samples of an elastic binder (Sylgard 184) were embedded with inert and energetic particles placed in a fixed spatial pattern and were subsequently excited with an ultrasonic transducer at discrete frequencies from 100 kHz to 20 MHz. The temperature and velocity responses of the sample surfaces suggest that heating due to frictional effects occurred near the particles at excitation frequencies near the transducer resonance of 215 kHz. An analytical solution involving a heat point source was used to estimate heating rates and temperatures at the particle locations in this frequency region. Heating located near the sample surface at frequencies near and above 1 MHz was attributed to viscoelastic effects related to the surface motion of the samples. At elevated excitation parameters near the transdu...


Journal of Energetic Materials | 2015

Nanoscale Characterization of Mock Explosive Materials Using Advanced Atomic Force Microscopy Methods

Xin Xu; Jesus O. Mares; Lori J. Groven; Steven F. Son; R. Reifenberger; Arvind Raman

Most explosives are micro- and nanoscale composite material systems consisting of energetic crystals, amorphous particles, binders, and additives whose response to mechanical, thermal, or electromagnetic insults is often controlled by submicrometer-scale heterogeneities and interfaces. Several advanced dynamic atomic force microscopy (AFM) techniques, including phase imaging, force volume mode, and Kelvin probe force microscopy with resonance enhancement for dielectric property mapping, have been used to map the local physical properties of mock explosive materials systems, allowing the identification of submicrometer heterogeneities in electrical and mechanical properties that could lead to the formation of hotspots under electromagnetic or mechanical stimuli. The physical interpretation of the property maps and the methods of image formation are presented. Possible interpretations of the results and future applications to energetic material systems are also discussed.


Archive | 2017

Phase Changes in Embedded HMX in Response to Periodic Mechanical Excitation

Z. A. Roberts; Jesus O. Mares; Jacob K. Miller; Ibrahim Emre Gunduz; Steven F. Son; Jeffrey F. Rhoads

It is well known that energy can be spatially localized when explosives are mechanically deformed; however, the heat generation mechanisms associated with this localization process are not fully understood. In this work, mesoscale hot spot formation in ultrasonically-excited energetic materials has been imaged in real-time. More specifically, periodic, mechanical excitation has been applied to Dow Corning Sylgard® 184/octahydro-1,3,5,7-tetranitro-1,3,5,7-tetrazocine (HMX) composite materials using contact piezoelectric transducers resulting in heating at various crystal locations. A thermally-induced phase transition from a β to δ non-centrosymmetric crystal structure for HMX results in the frequency doubling of incident laser radiation and can be used as a temperature proxy. In light of this, a high-repetition-rate 1064 nm Nd:YAG laser has been used to illuminate discrete HMX crystals, and a 532 nm filter has been applied to capture only the light emitted from δ-phase second harmonic generation (SHG). The visualization of δ-phase initiation and growth is useful for determining both heat generation mechanisms and heating rates at crystal/crystal and/or crystal/binder interfaces and contributes to the understanding and prediction of hot spots.


Journal of Applied Mechanics | 2017

Localized Heating Near a Rigid Spherical Inclusion in a Viscoelastic Binder Material Under Compressional Plane Wave Excitation

Jesus O. Mares; Daniel Woods; Caroline E. Baker; Steven F. Son; Jeffrey F. Rhoads; J. Stuart Bolton; Marcial Gonzalez

High-frequency mechanical excitation has been shown to generate heat within composite energetic materials and even induce reactions in single energetic crystals embedded within an elastic binder. To further the understanding of how wave scattering effects attributable to the presence of an energetic crystal can result in concentrated heating near the inclusion, an analytical model is developed. The stress and displacement solutions associated with the scattering of compressional plane waves by a spherical obstacle (Pao and Mow, 1963, “Scattering of Plane Compressional Waves by a Spherical Obstacle,” J. Appl. Phys., 34(3), pp. 493–499) are modified to account for the viscoelastic effects of the lossy media surrounding the inclusion (Gaunaurd and Uberall, 1978, “Theory of Resonant Scattering From Spherical Cavities in Elastic and Viscoelastic Media,” J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 63(6), pp. 1699–1712). The results from this solution are then utilized to estimate the spatial heat generation due to the harmonic straining of the material, and the temperature field of the system is predicted for a given duration of time. It is shown that for certain excitation and sample configurations, the elicited thermal response near the inclusion may approach, or even exceed, the decomposition temperatures of various energetic materials. Although this prediction indicates that viscoelastic heating of the binder may initiate decomposition of the crystal even in the absence of defects such as initial voids or debonding between the crystal and binder, the thermal response resulting from this bulk heating phenomenon may be a precursor to dynamic events associated with such crystal-scale effects. [DOI: 10.1115/1.4035522]


Volume 9: Mechanics of Solids, Structures and Fluids; NDE, Diagnosis, and Prognosis | 2016

Localized Heating due to Stress Concentrations Induced in a Lossy Elastic Medium via the Scattering of Compressional Waves by a Rigid Spherical Inclusion

Jesus O. Mares; Daniel Woods; Caroline E. Baker; Steven F. Son; Jeffrey F. Rhoads; J. Stuart Bolton; Marcial Gonzalez

High-frequency mechanical excitation has been shown to generate heat within composite energetic materials and even induce reactions in single energetic crystals embedded within an elastic binder. To further the understanding of how wave scattering effects attributable to the presence of an energetic crystal can result in concentrated heating near the inclusion, an analytical model is presented. The stress and displacement solutions associated with the scattering of compressional plane waves by a spherical obstacle (Pao and Mow, 1963) are modified to account for the viscoelastic effects of the lossy media surrounding the inclusion (Gaunaurd and Uberall, 1978). The results from this solution are then utilized to estimate the spatial heat generation due to the harmonic straining of the material, and the temperature field of the system is predicted for a given duration of time. It is shown that for certain excitation and sample configurations, the elicited thermal response near the inclusion may approach, or even exceed, realistic decomposition temperatures of various energetic materials. Although this prediction indicates that viscoelastic heating of the binder may initiate the decomposition of the crystal even in the absence of defects such as initial voids or debonding between the crystal and binder, the thermal response resulting from this bulk heating phenomenon may be a precursor to dynamic events associated with such crystal-scale effects. ∗Address all correspondence to this author.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2016

The impact of crystal morphology on the thermal responses of ultrasonically-excited energetic materials

Jacob K. Miller; Jesus O. Mares; Ibrahim Emre Gunduz; Steven F. Son; Jeffrey F. Rhoads


Combustion and Flame | 2018

Relating a small-scale shock sensitivity experiment to large-scale failure diameter in an aluminized ammonium nitrate non-ideal explosive

Nicholas R. Cummock; Jesus O. Mares; Ibrahim Emre Gunduz; Steven F. Son


Proceedings of the American Society for Composites — Thirty-second Technical Conference | 2017

Visualization of PBX Response to Impact Loading

Nicholas Kerschen; Zherui Guo; Tao Sun; Ben Claus; Jesus O. Mares; Kamel Fezzaa; Weinong W. Chen

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Kamel Fezzaa

Argonne National Laboratory

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Tao Sun

Argonne National Laboratory

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