Pykrete is the frozen composite material of the World War II

During the war, government of the allies considered the construction of ice structures converted from artificial icebergs into aircraft carriers. The idea to use ice for construction of floating aerodromes, or giant aircraft carriers, was launched by Geoffrey Pyke, and then was developed in a projec...

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Main Authors: O. V. Kovalev, M. N. Andreev, V. V. Rice
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: Nauka 2016-02-01
Series:Lëd i Sneg
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ice-snow.igras.ru/jour/article/view/274
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spelling doaj-2b54aa1665824e1eb4aa1048a3e84abb2021-08-02T08:42:09ZrusNaukaLëd i Sneg2076-67342412-37652016-02-0156111912710.15356/2076-6734-2016-1-119-127258Pykrete is the frozen composite material of the World War IIO. V. Kovalev0M. N. Andreev1V. V. Rice2National Mineral Resources University (Mining University)National Mineral Resources University (Mining University)National Mineral Resources University (Mining University)During the war, government of the allies considered the construction of ice structures converted from artificial icebergs into aircraft carriers. The idea to use ice for construction of floating aerodromes, or giant aircraft carriers, was launched by Geoffrey Pyke, and then was developed in a project called «Habbakuk». Aircraft carriers, made of ice, had to work for a long period of time at temperatures of water and air, resulting in rapid destruction of the structure of ordinary ice. The ice in its pure form is unsuitable for any engineering form therefore the experiments on reinforcement of ice were undertaken. New form of ice engineering was based on the type of reinforcement patterns of ice and coating it with an insulating material, which would greatly reduce the influence of melting due to the temperature of the ambient air. After tests with different substances and proportions, it was found that the mixture of ice with wood pulp, amounting to about 14%, gives the best result of reinforcement. Proposed dimensions of «Habbakuk» were 610 m (2000 ft) long, 90 m (300 feet) in width and a height of 60 m (200 ft). In 1943, on the surface of the lake Patricia a reduced model to test the viability of the project was constructed. Development of improved long-range aviation, the airbase in Iceland and other technological advances contributed to the successful elimination of the threat from submarines, so the project had been suspended. The technology of strong ice structures invented during the World War II time can still have practical applications today.https://ice-snow.igras.ru/jour/article/view/274frozen compositepykretethe ship of iceuse of the reinforced ice
collection DOAJ
language Russian
format Article
sources DOAJ
author O. V. Kovalev
M. N. Andreev
V. V. Rice
spellingShingle O. V. Kovalev
M. N. Andreev
V. V. Rice
Pykrete is the frozen composite material of the World War II
Lëd i Sneg
frozen composite
pykrete
the ship of ice
use of the reinforced ice
author_facet O. V. Kovalev
M. N. Andreev
V. V. Rice
author_sort O. V. Kovalev
title Pykrete is the frozen composite material of the World War II
title_short Pykrete is the frozen composite material of the World War II
title_full Pykrete is the frozen composite material of the World War II
title_fullStr Pykrete is the frozen composite material of the World War II
title_full_unstemmed Pykrete is the frozen composite material of the World War II
title_sort pykrete is the frozen composite material of the world war ii
publisher Nauka
series Lëd i Sneg
issn 2076-6734
2412-3765
publishDate 2016-02-01
description During the war, government of the allies considered the construction of ice structures converted from artificial icebergs into aircraft carriers. The idea to use ice for construction of floating aerodromes, or giant aircraft carriers, was launched by Geoffrey Pyke, and then was developed in a project called «Habbakuk». Aircraft carriers, made of ice, had to work for a long period of time at temperatures of water and air, resulting in rapid destruction of the structure of ordinary ice. The ice in its pure form is unsuitable for any engineering form therefore the experiments on reinforcement of ice were undertaken. New form of ice engineering was based on the type of reinforcement patterns of ice and coating it with an insulating material, which would greatly reduce the influence of melting due to the temperature of the ambient air. After tests with different substances and proportions, it was found that the mixture of ice with wood pulp, amounting to about 14%, gives the best result of reinforcement. Proposed dimensions of «Habbakuk» were 610 m (2000 ft) long, 90 m (300 feet) in width and a height of 60 m (200 ft). In 1943, on the surface of the lake Patricia a reduced model to test the viability of the project was constructed. Development of improved long-range aviation, the airbase in Iceland and other technological advances contributed to the successful elimination of the threat from submarines, so the project had been suspended. The technology of strong ice structures invented during the World War II time can still have practical applications today.
topic frozen composite
pykrete
the ship of ice
use of the reinforced ice
url https://ice-snow.igras.ru/jour/article/view/274
work_keys_str_mv AT ovkovalev pykreteisthefrozencompositematerialoftheworldwarii
AT mnandreev pykreteisthefrozencompositematerialoftheworldwarii
AT vvrice pykreteisthefrozencompositematerialoftheworldwarii
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