1. Experimental Testing and Numerical Modeling of Ballistic Impact on S-2 Glass/SC15 Composites
- Author
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Christopher T. Key and C. Scott Alexander
- Subjects
Materials science ,Materials Science (miscellaneous) ,Stress–strain curve ,Composite number ,02 engineering and technology ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Residual ,020303 mechanical engineering & transports ,0203 mechanical engineering ,Mechanics of Materials ,Solid mechanics ,SPHERES ,Ultrasonic sensor ,Composite material ,0210 nano-technology ,Anisotropy ,Ballistic impact - Abstract
The work presented in this paper details both an experimental program and an associated numerical modeling effort to characterize and predict the ballistic response of S-2 glass/SC15 epoxy composite panels. The experimental program consisted of ¼ inch diameter soft carbon steel spheres impacting ¼ and ½ inch thick flat composite panels at velocities ranging from 220 to 1570 m/s. High speed cameras were used to capture the impact event and resulting residual velocity of the spheres for each test configuration. After testing, each panel was inspected both visually and with ultrasonic C-scan techniques to determine the extent and depth of damage imparted on the panel by the impactor. The numerical modeling efforts utilized the anisotropic multi-constituent composite model (MCM) within the CTH shock physics hydrocode. The MCM model allows for evaluation of damage at the constituent level through continuum averaged stress and strain fields. The model also accounts for the inherent coupling of the equation of state and strength response that occurs in anisotropic composite materials. Finally, the simulation results are compared against the experimentally measured residual velocity as a quantitative metric and against the measured damage extent and patterns as a qualitative metric. The comparisons show good agreement in residual velocity and damage extent.
- Published
- 2018
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