An Improved Mechanical Material Model for Ballistic Soda-Lime Glass

In our recent work (Grujicic et al., Int. J. Impact Eng ., 2008), various open-literature experimental findings pertaining to the ballistic behavior of soda-lime glass were used to construct a simple, physically based, high strain rate, high-pressure, large-strain mechanical model for this material....

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of materials engineering and performance 2009-11, Vol.18 (8), p.1012-1028
Hauptverfasser: Grujicic, M., Pandurangan, B., Bell, W.C., Coutris, N., Cheeseman, B.A., Fountzoulas, C., Patel, P., Templeton, D.W., Bishnoi, K.D.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In our recent work (Grujicic et al., Int. J. Impact Eng ., 2008), various open-literature experimental findings pertaining to the ballistic behavior of soda-lime glass were used to construct a simple, physically based, high strain rate, high-pressure, large-strain mechanical model for this material. The model was structured in such a way that it is suitable for direct incorporation into standard commercial transient non-linear dynamics finite element-based software packages like ANSYS/Autodyn (Century Dynamics Inc., 2007) or ABAQUS/Explicit (Dessault Systems, 2007). To validate the material model, a set of finite element analyses of the edge-on-impact tests was conducted and the results compared with their experimental counterparts obtained in the recent work of Strassburger et al. ( Proceedings of the 23rd International Symposium on Ballistics , Spain, April 2007; Proceedings of the 22nd International Symposium on Ballistics , November 2005, Vancouver, Canada). In general, a good agreement was found between the computational and the experimental results relative to: (a) the front shapes and the propagation velocities of the longitudinal and transverse waves generated in the target during impact and (b) the front shapes and propagation velocities of a coherent-damage zone (a zone surrounding the projectile/target contact surface which contains numerous micron and submicron-size cracks). However, substantial computational analysis/experiment disagreements were found relative to the formation of crack centers , i.e. relative to the presence and distribution of isolated millimeter-size cracks nucleated ahead of the advancing coherent-damage zone front. In the present work, it was shown that these disagreements can be substantially reduced if the glass model (Grujicic et al., Int. J. Impact Eng ., 2008) is advanced to include a simple macrocracking algorithm based on the linear elastic fracture mechanics.
ISSN:1059-9495
1544-1024
DOI:10.1007/s11665-008-9343-0