The ability to accurately determine blast loading parameters will enable more fundamental studies on the sources of blast parameter variability and their influence on the magnitude and form of the loading itself. This will ultimately lead to a better fundamental understanding of blast wave behaviour, and will result in more efficient and effective protective systems and enhanced resilience of critical infrastructure. This article presents a study on time of arrival as a diagnostic for far-field high explosive blasts, and makes use of the results from a large number of historic tests and newly performed experiments where the propagating shock front was filmed using a high-speed video (HSV) camera. A new method for optical shock tracking of far-field blast tests is developed and validated, and full-field arrival time results are compared against those determined from the historic data recorded using traditional pressure gauges. Arrival time variability is shown to be considerably lower than peak pressure and peak specific impulse, and is shown to decrease exponentially with increasing scaled distance. Further, the method presented in this article using HSV cameras to determine arrival time yields further reductions in variability. Finally, it is demonstrated that the method can be used to accurately determine far-field TNT equivalence of high explosives.
The understanding of blast loads is critical for the development of infrastructure that protects against explosions. However, the lack of high-quality experimental work on the characterisation of such loads prevents a better understanding of many scenarios. Blast loads are typically characterised by use of some form of pressure gauge, from which the temperature can be inferred from a pressure measurement. However, such an approach to temperature measurement is limited; it assumes ideal gas laws apply throughout, which may not be the case for high temperature and pressure scenarios. In contrast, infrared radiation thermometers (IRTs) perform a measurement of temperature based upon the emitted radiance from the target object. The IRTs can measure fast changes in transient temperature, making them seemingly ideal for the measurement of a fireball’s temperature. In this work, we present the use of a high-speed IRT for the measurement of early-stage explosive development and fireball expansion within a confined blast, with the temperature of the explosive fireball measured from its emitted radiance. The temperature measured by the IRT was corroborated against the temperature inferred from a pressure gauge measurement; both instruments measured the same temperature from the quasi-static pressure (QSP) point onwards. Before the QSP point, it is deduced that the IRT measures the average temperature of the fireball over a wide field-of-view (FOV), as opposed to that inferred from the singular shocks detected by the pressure gauge. Therefore, use of an IRT, in tandem with a pressure gauge, provides a potential invaluable measurement technique for the characterisation the early stages of a fireball as it develops and expands.
A significant amount of scientific effort has been dedicated to measuring and understanding the effects of explosions, leading to the development of semi-empirical methods for rapid prediction of blast load parameters. The most well-known of these, termed the Kingery and Bulmash method, makes use of polylogarithmic curves derived from a compilation of medium to large scale experimental tests performed over many decades. However, there is still no general consensus on the accuracy and validity of this approach, despite some researchers reporting consistently high levels of agreement. Further, it is still not known whether blast loading can be considered deterministic, or whether it is intrinsically variable, the extent of this variability, and the range and scales over which these variations are observed. This article critically reviews historic and contemporary blast experiments, including newly generated arena tests with RDX and PETN-based explosives, with a view to demonstrating the accuracy with which blast load parameters can be predicted using semi-empirical approaches.
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.
Accurate modelling of free-field detonations needs to account for both the initial energy release and gas generation, and the subsequent reaction of the initial detonation products with external oxygen. An upper limit for the extent of ‘afterburn’ can be ascertained from comparison of contained blasts in reactive (air) and inert (nitrogen) bath gases. The peak quasistatic pressures (QSP) and the gas phase products were determined in a 0.276 m3 blast chamber following detonations of the plastic explosive PE4. The experimental observations were compared to predictions based on standard models, CEA and EXPLO5. The best agreement between models and experiment, for both products and QSPs, was obtained from the Springall-Roberts treatment of detonation products in nitrogen, and complete combustion of these in air.
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