Application of the modified compaction material model to the analysis of landmine detonation in soil with various degrees of water saturation

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Abstract

A series of transient non-linear dynamics computational analyses of the explosion phenomena accompanying the detonation of a 100g C4 mine buried in sand to different depths is carried out using the software package AUTODYN. The mechanical response of sand under high deformation-rate conditions has been represented using the modified compaction material model developed in our recent work [1]. While the mechanical response of the other attendant materials (air, gaseous-detonation products and AISI 1006 mild steel) is accounted for using the material models available in literature. The results obtained (specifically, the temporal evolution of the sand overburden shape and pressure at various locations in air above the detonation site) were compared with their experimental counterparts for a (50wt%-sand/50wt.%-clay) soil obtained recently by Foedinger [2]. The comparison revealed that the modified compaction material model for sand can account reasonably well for the magnitude, spatial distribution and the temporal evolution of the dynamic loads accompanying detonation of shallow-buried mines in soils with various clay and water contents. © 2008 - IOS Press and the authors. All rights reserved.

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Grujicic, M., Pandurangan, B., Summers, J. D., Cheeseman, B. A., Roy, W. N., & Skaggs, R. R. (2008). Application of the modified compaction material model to the analysis of landmine detonation in soil with various degrees of water saturation. Shock and Vibration, 15(1), 79–99. https://doi.org/10.1155/2008/765494

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