Abstract

This paper analyzes the results of further development of the Nextel ceramic cloth, multiple-bumper or multi-shock shield, first presented at the 1989 HVIS and published as Cour-Palais and Crews (1990). The supporting hypervelocity impact testing was done by the University of Dayton Research Institute, Dayton, Ohio, in their Impact Physics Laboratory, using 0.953cm aluminum spheres and equal-mass (l/d=0.16) aluminum discs. The projectiles were launched at 6.6 to 6.9km/s by a 50 20 mm , two-stage light gas gun, normal to the targets. The objective of this development project was to investigate light-weight, flexible, multiple-bumper shields for possible use as protection for some elements of Space Station Freedom. The analysis discusses the performance of shields consisting of different combinations of Nextel ceramic cloth bumpers and aluminum rear sheets. Several Nextel fiber strengths and weaves were investigated as bumpers and a baseline, light-weight shield that met the failure criteria was established using the spherical aluminum projectiles. This same target was then tested against the aluminum discs to investigate the effect of projectile shape. The multi-shock phenomena was also investigated during this project using the UDRI multiple, orthogonal x-ray system to observe the first three or four sequential impacts of the projectile fragments. Some of these are reproduced in the paper, together with views of the associated rear sheet damage. Similarities between the shock effects of the Nextel and thin aluminum bumpers are shown, and the aluminum multiple-bumper shield results are used to further understand the multi-shock process. Finally, the paper modifies the equation constants given by Cour-Palais and Crews (1990), adds constants for the l/d=0.16 disc, and provides evidence that they scale with momentum to 10km/s.

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