Energy Release and Fragmentation of Brittle Aluminum Reactive Material Cases

Autor: Joseph P. Hooper, Jacob Kline, Brian P. Mason
Přispěvatelé: Naval Postgraduate School, Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.), Physics
Rok vydání: 2021
Předmět:
Popis: 17 USC 105 interim-entered record; under review. The article of record as published may be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/prep.202100014 Cylindrical reactive material cases produced by the consolidation of an aluminum powder were tested via explosive launch in a closed chamber. One configuration measured the quasistatic overpressure generated by the case and explosive, and two further tests focused on softcatch of fragments before and after striking the chamber walls. On a volumetric basis, the reactive material cases produced two to three times the combustion energy of an aluminum 6061 alloy case or a bare nitromethane explosive that was tested as comparisons. The metal combustion primarily occurs after case fragments impact the walls. Increasing the reactive material case thickness produces a higher pressure but lower combustion efficiency per unit mass, despite producing comparable or slightly more fine fragments on a per gram basis. Though the brittle, pressed aluminum cases have low toughness and tensile strength, recovered fragment patterns show a range of fragment sizes up to 1 mm, with approximately one-third of the mass below 100 μm. Office of Naval Research Defense Threat Reduction Agency Identified in text as U.S. Government work. N0001420WX00021
Databáze: OpenAIRE