Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
829275 Materials & Design (1980-2015) 2014 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Experiments accurately modelled from material data available in literature.•Mechanics of degradation explained with mechanisms related to strain distributions.•Separation of material and mechanism related rate effects on ballistic limit.•Trends shown for single and multi-hit performance over range of material properties.

Multi-impact of projectiles on thin 304 stainless steel plates is investigated to assess the degradation of ballistic performance, and to characterise the inherent mechanisms. Assessment of ballistic degradation is by means of a double-impact of rigid spheres at the same site on a circular clamped plate. The limiting velocity of the second impact, will be altered by the velocity of the antecedent impact. Finite element analyses were used to elucidate experimental results and understand the underlying mechanisms that give rise to the performance degradation. The effect of strength and ductility on the single and multi-impact performance was also considered. The model captured the experimental results with excellent agreement. Moreover, the material parameters used within the model were exclusively obtained from published works with no fitting or calibration required. An attempt is made to quantify the elevation of the ballistic limit of thin plates by the dynamic mechanism of travelling hinges. Key conclusions: The multi-hit performance scales linearly with the single-hit performance; and strength is a significantly greater effector of increased ballistic limit than ductility, even at the expense of toughness.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Engineering (General)
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