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Prediction of material strength and fracture of glass using the SPHINX smooth particle hydrodynamics code
Author(s) -
D.A. Mandell,
C.A. Wingate
Publication year - 1994
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/29427
Subject(s) - brittleness , sphinx , rod , fracture (geology) , armour , bunker , materials science , sensitivity (control systems) , toughened glass , particle (ecology) , composite material , structural engineering , engineering , geology , medicine , art , coal , visual arts , oceanography , alternative medicine , pathology , layer (electronics) , electronic engineering , waste management
The design of many military devices involves numerical predictions of the material strength and fracture of brittle materials. The materials of interest include ceramics, that are used in armor packages; glass that is used in truck and jeep windshields and in helicopters; and rock and concrete that are used in underground bunkers. As part of a program to develop advanced hydrocode design tools, the authors have implemented a brittle fracture model for glass into the SPHINX smooth particle hydrodynamics code. The authors have evaluated this model and the code by predicting data from one-dimensional flyer plate impacts into glass, and data from tungsten rods impacting glass. Since fractured glass properties, which are needed in the model, are not available, the authors did sensitivity studies of these properties, as well as sensitivity studies to determine the number of particles needed in the calculations. The numerical results are in good agreement with the data

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