Pressure Irregularities in the Loading of Vehicles by Buried Mines

International Society of Explosives Engineers
W. L. Fourney Uli Leiste Leslie Taylor
Organization:
International Society of Explosives Engineers
Pages:
12
File Size:
915 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2008

Abstract

Over the past few years, our laboratory has been investigating the loading on vehicles due to the detonation of buried explosives. We have been using target plates to represent the bottom of the vehicles that were being subject to the forces from the detonating explosives. Parameters shown to be important in the blast loading were type of soil, stand off distance (distance from the surface of the soil to the bottom of the target plate), and depth of burial (distance of the charge center of gravity to the sand surface). We conducted over the first year of our work a large number of tests which looked at the impulse being applied to the plates as a function of depth of burial, stand off distance, and type of soil. Of the three parameters we found stand off distance to be most important, depth of burial to be the next most important parameter, with type of soil least important. We also found that impulse could be scaled with explosive size quite accurately and that results (for impulse) were quite repeatable from one test to the next.
Citation

APA: W. L. Fourney Uli Leiste Leslie Taylor  (2008)  Pressure Irregularities in the Loading of Vehicles by Buried Mines

MLA: W. L. Fourney Uli Leiste Leslie Taylor Pressure Irregularities in the Loading of Vehicles by Buried Mines. International Society of Explosives Engineers, 2008.

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