Abstract
Military personnel use protective armor systems that are frequently exposed to low-level damage, such as non-ballistic impact, wear-and-tear from everyday use, and damage during storage of equipment. The extent to which such low-level pre-damage could affect the performance of an armor system is unknown. In this work, low-level pre-damage has been introduced into a Kevlar/phenolic resin-starved composite panel using tensile loading. The tensile stress–strain behavior of this eight-layer material has been investigated and has been found to have two distinct regions; these have been understood in terms of the microstructure and damage within the composite panels investigated using micro-computed tomography and digital image correlation. Ballistic testing carried out on pristine (control) and pre-damaged panels did not indicate any difference in the V50 ballistic performance. However, an indication of a difference in response to ballistic impact was observed; the area of maximal local out-of-plane deformation for the pre-damaged panels was found to be twice that of the control panels, and the global out-of-plane deformation across the panel was also larger.
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Edwards, C. A., Ogin, S. L., Jesson, D. A., Oldfield, M., Livesey, R. L., James, B. J., & Boardman, R. P. (2021). Characterization and ballistic performance of thin pre-damaged resin-starved aramid-fiber composite panels. Textile Research Journal, 91(23–24), 2846–2858. https://doi.org/10.1177/00405175211013424
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