Abstract
Soil stress distribution was investigated to understand and to develop means for detonating or neutralizing antipersonnel landmines. Specifically, the loading patterns within the soil attributable to the human gait, as well as those derived from a mechanism that delivers an impact load that is being developed for neutralizing antipersonnel landmines, were studied. Experiments were conducted in the soil bin facilities in the Department of Agricultural and Bioresource Engineering at the University of Saskatchewan. Both load cells and mechanically reproduced devices (MRDs), buried at depths of 50, 100, 150 and 200 mm, were used to measure the transmitted forces through the soil. The load cells provided measurements of the temporal load patterns as transferred through the soil, whereas the MRDs indicated the ability for the person or mechanism to successfully trigger a typical antipersonnel landmine. Both forces and impulses based on the load cell data were used as measures for comparison. The key results of the investigation showed human locomotion imparted a load of longer duration than did the impact from the mechanical device; the corresponding soil stresses increased with increasing human weight and impact loads; and forces in the soil increased with higher initial soil compaction level.
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