A rigid elliptical cross-sectional projectile with different geometrical characteristics penetration into concrete target
-
Published:2020-03-01
Issue:3
Volume:1507
Page:032001
-
ISSN:1742-6588
-
Container-title:Journal of Physics: Conference Series
-
language:
-
Short-container-title:J. Phys.: Conf. Ser.
Author:
Dai X H,Wang K H,Duan J,Li M R,Qian B W,Zhou G
Abstract
Abstract
Elliptical cross-sectional projectiles have recently attracted attention because they fit the flattened shape of earth-penetrating weapons. This study aims to investigate a rigid elliptical cross-sectional projectile with different geometrical characteristics penetration into the semi-infinite concrete targets by implementing a theoretical method. The general geometric models of four types of elliptical cross-sectional projectiles are introduced; closed-form penetration equations are then derived based on the dynamic cavity-expansion theory. Furthermore, the present models are validated by comparing the predicted penetration depths with the predictions obtained using the semi-empirical formulae and test data; the maximum deviation from the test data is 15.8%. In addition, the deceleration, velocity, and displacement of the projectiles during the penetration process are obtained based on the present models, and the penetration performance of the four types of elliptical cross-sectional projectiles is discussed by comparing the penetration depths. The conical-nose elliptical cross-sectional projectile exhibits the best penetration performance than the other three types if the nose length is sufficiently large, and the ogive-nose elliptical cross-sectional projectile gradually exhibits its penetration performance advantage with the increase in the nose length.
Subject
General Physics and Astronomy
Reference32 articles.
1. The theory of indentation and hardness tests;Bishop,1945
2. On the mechanics of indentation and cratering in solid targets of strain-hardening metals by impact of hard and soft sphere;Goodier,1965
3. A spherical cavity-expansion penetration model for concrete targets;Forrestal,1997