Back to Search Start Over

Ballistically equivalent aluminium targets and the effect of hole slenderness ratio on ductile plate perforation.

Authors :
Masri, Rami
Source :
International Journal of Impact Engineering. Jun2015, Vol. 80, p45-55. 11p.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

The concept of ballistically equivalent metals for ductile plate perforation has been defined and demonstrated for five aluminium alloys. Heuristic derivation of a semi-empirical relation between specific cavitation energy s c and hole slenderness ratio h / D (the ratio between plate thickness h and projectile nose base diameter D which is also known as the normalized plate thickness) has exposed a logarithmic dependence which is verified by experimental data. A closed-form logarithmic expression for s c which takes into account the h / D effect has led to a closed-form formula for the ballistic limit. The expression for s c is based on the spherical cavitation yield stress Y c S which serves as a scaling yield stress for strain-hardening (softening) response. It is found that ballistically equivalent metals should have practically the same values of Y c S and elastic modulus. The perforation of aluminium targets by 7.62 mm APM2 bullets is discussed and vast amount of experimental data is used to validate the particular ballistic limit formula. Application of the closed-form model is also demonstrated with connection to the more general concept of ballistically equivalent targets . The h / D effect on perforation of multilayered targets is examined and it is found that for ductile plate perforation the ballistic limit of a monolithic target is higher than the ballistic limit of any combination of its air-gapped parts. Under the constraint of n air-gapped protective layers with total thickness h the minimum ballistic limit is obtained for n identical layers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0734743X
Volume :
80
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
International Journal of Impact Engineering
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
102100478
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijimpeng.2015.01.003