Blast and Shock Mitigation Through the Use of Advanced Materials

ORAL

Abstract

The dynamic response to low amplitude blast waves of four viscoelastic materials has been investigated: Dragonshield BC$^{\mathrm{TM}}$ and three polyurea formulations (P1000, P650, and a P250/1000 blend). A 40-mm-bore gas gun was used as a shock tube to generate planar blast waves, ranging from 1 to 2 bars, that impacted instrumented target assemblies mounted on the gas gun muzzle. Each target assembly consisted of a viscoelastic material sample sandwiched between two gauge assemblies for measuring wave velocity and input/output stresses. Each gauge assembly consisted of one polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) stress gauge sandwiched between two 3.25 inch diameter 6061-T6 aluminum discs. Impedance matching techniques were used on the stress measurements to calculate the stresses on the front and back of the samples. The shock velocity-particle velocity relationship, stress-particle velocity relationship, and blast attenuation for each material were determined. The experimental technique, analysis methodology, and results will be presented.

Authors

  • Susan Bartyczak

    • Naval Surface Warfare Center Dahlgren Division
  • Lauren Edgerton

    • Naval Surface Warfare Center Dahlgren Division
  • Willis Mock

    • Kratos Defense Engineering Solutions