Abstract
Abstract
Background
Polyurethane foams have many uses ranging from comfort fitting seats and shoes to protective inserts in helmets and sports equipment. Current military helmet designs employ foam pads of varying densities and bulk material properties to help absorb energy from impacts ranging from quasi-static to ballistic level strain-rates.
Objective
This study aims to analyze the thermomechanical uniaxial compression behavior of a high density liner foam pad and a low density liner foam pad used in the Advanced Combat Helmet. These experiments were conducted under strain-rates of $$10^2$$
10
2
s$$^{-1}$$
-
1
and under temperature conditions ranging from -20 to 40 °C. This temperature range was chosen to simulate desert and arctic conditions, with a strain-rate regime chosen to represent loads that would occur often throughout the life of the helmet, such as drops, bumps from riding in a vehicle, or heavy collisions from falling.
Method
Multiple experimental apparatuses were used in this study, including a Shimadzu TCE-N300 thermostatic chamber (used to create the varying temperature environments) and a custom-built drop-test system (used to induce intermediate strain-rates). Every experiment was paired with two accelerometers and a high speed camera used for Digital Image Correlation (DIC) to analyze sample deformation and resultant acceleration. The foam’s mechanical response and energy absorption properties were investigated from the measured stress-strain curves. Additionally, each foam composition was analyzed with X-ray computed micro-tomography (XCT) to investigate microstructure properties pre and post-mortem.
Results
Results show that temperature decreased the energy absorption of the low density composition by 48% ± 5% as temperature changed from -20 °C to 40 °C, while energy absorption increased by 53% ± 16% for the high density composition over the same temperature.
Conclusion
A comparison between the loading response and the material’s density characteristics revealed that the foam’s mechanical properties are heavily dependent on strain-rate applications, as well as environmental factors including temperature. Several important characteristics surrounding each foam composition’s deformation mechanics and damage tolerance as a result of temperature are discussed.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
1 articles.
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