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Dimensional analysis of impulse loading resulting from detonation of shallow-buried charges

Mica Grujicic (Department of Mechanical Engineering, Clemson University, Clemson, South Carolina, USA)
Patrick Glomski (Department of Mechanical Engineering, Clemson University, Clemson, South Carolina, USA)
Bryan Cheeseman (Army Research Laboratory, Survivability Materials Branch, Aberdeen Proving Ground, Aberdeen, Maryland, USA)

Multidiscipline Modeling in Materials and Structures

ISSN: 1573-6105

Article publication date: 30 September 2013

135

Abstract

Purpose

Development of military vehicles capable of surviving shallow-buried explosive blast is seldom done using full-scale prototype testing because of the associated prohibitively high cost, the destructive nature of testing, and the requirements for large-scale experimental-test facilities and a large crew of engineers committed to the task. Instead, tests of small-scale models are generally employed and the model-based results are scaled up to the full-size vehicle. In these scale-up efforts, various dimensional analyses are used whose establishment and validation requires major experimental testing efforts and different-scale models. The paper aims to discuss these issues.

Design/methodology/approach

In the present work, a critical assessment is carried out of some of the most important past efforts aimed at developing the basic dimensional analysis formulation for the problem of impulse loading experienced by target structures (e.g. vehicle hull) due to detonation of explosive charges buried to different depths in sand/soil (of different consistency, porosity, and saturation levels).

Findings

It was found that the analysis can be substantially simplified if only the physical parameters associated with first-order effects are retained and if some of the sand/soil parameters are replaced with their counterparts which better reflect the role of soil (via the effects of soil compaction in the region surrounding the explosive and via the effects of sand-overburden stretching and acceleration before the associated sand bubble bursts and venting of the gaseous detonation products takes place). Once the dimensional analysis is reformulated, a variety of experimental results pertaining to the total blast impulse under different soil conditions, charge configurations, charge deployment strategies, and vehicle ground clearances are used to establish the underlying functional relations.

Originality/value

The present work clearly established that due to the non-dimensional nature of the quantities formulated, the established relations can be utilized across different length scales, i.e. although they are obtained using mainly the small-scale model results, they can be applied at the full vehicle length scale.

Keywords

Citation

Grujicic, M., Glomski, P. and Cheeseman, B. (2013), "Dimensional analysis of impulse loading resulting from detonation of shallow-buried charges", Multidiscipline Modeling in Materials and Structures, Vol. 9 No. 3, pp. 367-390. https://doi.org/10.1108/MMMS-01-2013-0002

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2013, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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