Quantification of fragmentation capture materials and an assessment of the viability of economical alternatives: a preliminary study

Date

2023-09-11

Supervisor/s

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

The Royal Society

Department

Type

Article

ISSN

1364-503X

Format

Free to read from

Citation

Read J, Ritchie T, Brown L, et al., (2023) Quantification of fragmentation capture materials and an assessment of the viability of economical alternatives: a preliminary study, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences. Volume 381, Issue 2259, October 2023

Abstract

High pressure, high temperature events need to be quantified experimentally. Where fragmentation occurs i.e. against Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), there is a requirement for both a reliable and repeatable measurement of numerous experimental metrics. Typically, the most critical is calculating the energy absorbed by the target material, to characterise target performance. This is achieved by detonating a device and capturing a proportion of the fragmentation in a suitable material that can achieve successful recovery of all fragmentation produced. Therefore, allowing the estimation of the target’s response using the depth of penetration within the capture material which allows the calculation of energy absorption.

The current standardised fragmentation capture material used within the United Kingdom is known as strawboard. Although effective, this material is both expensive and limited in its availability. This study explores the classification of strawboard to provide a suitable baseline to compare against Medium Density Fibreboard (MDF) and flooring underlay which represent two more economically friendly alternatives on the open market. It was found that the uniformity of response for the MDF material was better than that of strawboard, due to its reproducibility between batches and velocity ranges. To further explore this phenomena, high explosive trials were conducted, further demonstrating MDF to be a viable, reliable, and cheaper alternative.

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

Strawboard, MDF, Underlay, Fragmentation Capture Materials, Trials and Testing, Explosive, Ballistic

DOI

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

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Relationships

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