Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
777103 International Journal of Impact Engineering 2009 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

The penetration process of rigid long rods with different nose shapes (ogive, spherical, conical and flat) is analyzed through a series of 2D numerical simulations. Aluminum and steel targets with different strengths (and large dimensions) are used to follow the deceleration process of these rods from impact, at different velocities, to the final penetration point. We find that for low impact velocities the deceleration of these rods is practicably constant, depending only on the strength of the target and the nose shape of the rod. Above a threshold (critical) impact velocity rod deceleration becomes velocity dependent due to the inertial response of the target. These critical velocities depend on the strength of the target and the nose shape of the rod. These observations led us to propose a simple penetration formula which accounts very well for penetration depths data for rigid steel rods with different nose shapes, impacting various aluminum targets at velocities up to about 1.5 km/s. For higher impact velocities, where the dynamic (inertial) contribution to the target resistance is important, we find good agreement between our model predictions and the simulation results for final penetration depths.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
Authors
, ,