Abstract

Nature has evolved ingenious armour designs, like the flexible carapaces of armadillo and boxfish consisting of hexagonal segments connected by collagen fibres, that serve as bioinspiration for modern ballistic armours. Here, Finite element modelling (FEM) used to analyze the effect of scale geometry and other impact parameters on the ballistic protection provided by a bioinspired segmented ceramic armour. For this purpose, the impact of cylindrical fragment simulating projectiles (FSPs) onto alumina-epoxy non-overlapping scaled plates was simulated. Scale geometrical parameters (size, thickness and shape) and impact conditions (FSP diameter, speed, location) are varied and the amount of damage produced in the ceramic tiles and the final residual velocity of the FSP after the impact are evaluated. It is found that segmentation drastically reduces the size of the damaged area without significantly reducing the ballistic protection in centred impact, provided the tile size is kept over a critical value. Such critical tile size (∼20mm, inscribed diameter, for impacts at 650m/s) is independent of the scale thickness, but decreases with projectile speed, although never below the diameter of the projectile. Off-centred impacts reduce the ballistic protection and increase the damaged area, but this can be minimized with an appropriate tile shape. In this sense and in agreement with the natural hexagonal tiles of the boxfish and armadillo, hexagonal scales are found to be optimal, exhibiting a variation of ballistic protection—measured as reduction of projectile speed—with impact location under 12%. Design guidelines for the fabrication of segmented protection systems are proposed in the light of these numerical results.

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