Abstract

The design of blast-resistant structures and protective systems requires a firm understanding of the loadings imparted to structures by blast waves. While empirical methods can reliably predict these loadings in the far field, there is currently a lack of understanding on the pressures experienced in the very near field, where physics-based numerical modelling and semi-empirical fast-running engineering model predictions can vary by an order of magnitude. In this paper, we present the design of an experimental facility capable of providing definitive spatially and temporally resolved reflected pressure data in the extreme near field (Z<0.5 m/kg1/3). The Mechanisms and Characterisation of Explosions (MaCE) facility is a specific near-field evolution of the existing Characterisation of Blast Loading (CoBL) facility, which uses an array of Hopkinson pressure bars embedded in a stiff target plate. Maraging steel pressure bars and specially designed strain gauges are used to increase the measurement capacity from 600 MPa to 1800 MPa, and 33 pressure bars in a radial grid are used to improve the spatial resolution from 25 mm to 12.5 mm over the 100 mm radius measurement area. In addition, the pressure bar diameter is reduced from 10 mm to 4 mm, which greatly reduces stress wave dispersion, increasing the effective bandwidth. This enables the observation of high-frequency features in the pressure measurements, which is vital for validating the near-field transient effects predicted by numerical modelling and developing effective blast mitigation methods.

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