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Modeling the high strain rate behavior of titanium undergoing ballistic impact and penetration

✍ Scribed by Hubert W. Meyer Jr.; David S. Kleponis


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2001
Tongue
English
Weight
810 KB
Volume
26
Category
Article
ISSN
0734-743X

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✦ Synopsis


Titanium is an important candidate in the search for lighter weight armors. Increasingly, it is being considered as a replacement for steel components. It is also an important component in the application of ceramics to armor systems, especially in armor modules that are capable of defeating kinetic energy penetrators while sustaining little or no penetration of the ceramic element. The best alloy available today for ballistic applications is Ti-6Al-4V, an aerospace grade titanium alloy. The principal deterrent to widespread use of this alloy as an armor material is cost, and a significant portion of the cost is in processing. Consequently, the U.S. Army Research Laboratory undertook a program to study a particular lower cost processing technique [1].
The objectives of this work are to characterize the low-cost titanium alloy by generating constants for the Johnson-Cook (JC) and Zerilli-Armstrong (ZA) strength models, and to use and compare these two models in simulations of ballistic experiments. High strain rate strength data for the low-cost titanium alloy are used to generate parameters for the two models. The approach to fitting the JC parameters follows one previously used successfully to model 2-in thick rolled homogeneous armor (RHA) [2]. The approach to fitting the ZA parameters is based on a method described by Gray et al. [3]. The resulting model parameters are used in the shock physics code CTH [4] to model a Ti-6Al-4V penetrator penetrating a Ti-6Al-4V semi-infinite block at impact velocities up to 2,000 m/s. Similar experiments are performed, and the predictions of the two models are compared to each other and to the experimental results.


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