Abstract

The ballistic impact of two 7XXX aluminum alloys, 7A52-T6 and 7A62-T6, as well as their combination in a 7B52 laminate plate, was simulated and experimentally tested. Three types of projectiles were utilized hard ogival nosed, hard blunt nosed, and 304 steel core projectiles to investigate the ballistic resistance and failure mechanisms of the aluminum alloy targets. Additionally, an existing modified Gurson-Tvergaard-Needleman (GTN) model incorporating shear, void growth, and spalling failure mechanisms, was employed to simulate the ballistic impact process, utilized to analyze energy dissipation during impact. The results reveal that the 7A52 alloy only experiences ductile hole expansion failure, whereas the 7A62 high-strength aluminum alloy undergoes spalling and fragmentation subsequent to penetration, leading to potential impact hazards. Due to its backing layer being the highly ductile 7A52 alloy, the laminate plate will not produce fragments after penetration. The improved GTN model provided better predictions of the impact failure modes of the aluminum alloys. Concerning impact performance, when subjected to hard ogival projectiles, the laminate alloy did not enhance material impact resistance. However, when impacted by blunt-nosed projectiles, the laminate alloy exhibited a 27 % improvement over the 7A52 plate and an 11.9 % increase over the 7A62 plate. Furthermore, when impacted by 304 steel core ogival projectiles, the laminate alloy demonstrated over a 41.3 % improvement compared to the 7A52 plate and over a 15.5 % increase compared to the 7A62 plate. The laminate plate's high ballistic performance was attributed to the increased plastic deformation energy after spalling failure, while ensuring high energy absorption during ductile hole expansion penetration.

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