Publication | Open Access
A preliminary investigation of projectile shape effects in hypervelocity impact of a double-sheet structure
27
Citations
6
References
1972
Year
EngineeringImpact (Mechanics)Structural CrashworthinessAerospace EngineeringMechanicsDouble-sheet StructureMechanical EngineeringImpact LoadingRear SheetSolid MechanicsHypervelocity ImpactImpact TestsProjectile Shape EffectsTerminal BallisticsCylinder DiameterThin-walled StructureMechanics Of Materials
Impact tests of a sphere and several cylinders of various masses and fineness ratios, all of aluminum, fired into an aluminum double-sheet structure at velocities near 7 km/sec, show that a cylinder, impacting in the direction of its axis, is considerably more effective as a penetrator than a sphere. Impacts of three cylinders of equal mass, but different fineness ratios, produced holes through the structures' rear sheet, whereas impact of a sphere of the same mass did not. Moreover, it was found that to prevent rear-sheet penetration, the mass of the 1/2-fineness-ratio cylinder had to be reduced by a factor greater than three. Further tests wherein the cylinder diameter was held constant while the cylinder length was systematically reduced showed that a cylinder with a fineness ratio of 0.07 and a mass of only 1/7 that of the sphere was still capable of producing a hole in the rear sheet.
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