Finite element simulations of ballistic impact on metal and composite plates

Response of a material impacted by projectiles especially bullets, or blast fragments, is extremely important in determining the range of impact it can sustain. As explicit finite element codes improve and advances material models become available, the hydrocodes find more widespread application in...

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Main Author: Chelluru, Sai Kiran
Other Authors: Lankarani, Hamid M.
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Wichita State University 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10057/1533
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spelling ndltd-WICHITA-oai-soar.wichita.edu-10057-15332013-04-19T20:59:51ZFinite element simulations of ballistic impact on metal and composite platesChelluru, Sai KiranElectronic dissertationsResponse of a material impacted by projectiles especially bullets, or blast fragments, is extremely important in determining the range of impact it can sustain. As explicit finite element codes improve and advances material models become available, the hydrocodes find more widespread application in many industries. In this thesis, a study of ballistic response is implemented using simulation of thin metal targets in LS -DYNA. Parametric studies are conducted to study the effects of various factors on the damage process. Further in the study an attempt has been made to study the response of composite targets to the projectile impact. For the composite target, a finite element model is implemented with Chang-Chang failure criteria. Comparisons of the finite element simulations to the experimental data include general as well as the time history response. Results indicate that the residual velocities from the experimental tests correlate well with the ones from finite element validation. A parametric study is then conducted with the validated models. Parameters including as projectile velocity, projectile mass, projectile geometry boundary conditions, target thickness target yield strength, target failure strain and friction between the target and the bullet are considered, which affect the Ballistic Impact process. This study demonstrates the accuracy and effectiveness of the finite element simulation of the impact tests on thin metallic targets with the help of Finite Element softwares.Thesis (M.S.)--Wichita State University, College of Engineering, Dept. of Mechanical Engineering"December 2007."Wichita State UniversityLankarani, Hamid M.2008-09-27T23:02:19Z2008-09-27T23:02:19Z20072007-12Thesisxiv, 101 leaves, ill.9221024 bytesapplication/pdft07086http://hdl.handle.net/10057/1533en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Electronic dissertations
spellingShingle Electronic dissertations
Chelluru, Sai Kiran
Finite element simulations of ballistic impact on metal and composite plates
description Response of a material impacted by projectiles especially bullets, or blast fragments, is extremely important in determining the range of impact it can sustain. As explicit finite element codes improve and advances material models become available, the hydrocodes find more widespread application in many industries. In this thesis, a study of ballistic response is implemented using simulation of thin metal targets in LS -DYNA. Parametric studies are conducted to study the effects of various factors on the damage process. Further in the study an attempt has been made to study the response of composite targets to the projectile impact. For the composite target, a finite element model is implemented with Chang-Chang failure criteria. Comparisons of the finite element simulations to the experimental data include general as well as the time history response. Results indicate that the residual velocities from the experimental tests correlate well with the ones from finite element validation. A parametric study is then conducted with the validated models. Parameters including as projectile velocity, projectile mass, projectile geometry boundary conditions, target thickness target yield strength, target failure strain and friction between the target and the bullet are considered, which affect the Ballistic Impact process. This study demonstrates the accuracy and effectiveness of the finite element simulation of the impact tests on thin metallic targets with the help of Finite Element softwares. === Thesis (M.S.)--Wichita State University, College of Engineering, Dept. of Mechanical Engineering === "December 2007."
author2 Lankarani, Hamid M.
author_facet Lankarani, Hamid M.
Chelluru, Sai Kiran
author Chelluru, Sai Kiran
author_sort Chelluru, Sai Kiran
title Finite element simulations of ballistic impact on metal and composite plates
title_short Finite element simulations of ballistic impact on metal and composite plates
title_full Finite element simulations of ballistic impact on metal and composite plates
title_fullStr Finite element simulations of ballistic impact on metal and composite plates
title_full_unstemmed Finite element simulations of ballistic impact on metal and composite plates
title_sort finite element simulations of ballistic impact on metal and composite plates
publisher Wichita State University
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/10057/1533
work_keys_str_mv AT chellurusaikiran finiteelementsimulationsofballisticimpactonmetalandcompositeplates
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