Evaluation of effectiveness of polymer coatings in reducing blast-induced deformation of steel plates

Received: 11 July 2021, Revised: 13 July 2021, Accepted: 22 Oct 2021, Available online: 22 Dec 2021, Version of Record: 22 Dec 2021

Damith Mohotti a, P.L.N. Fernando b, Dakshitha Weerasinghe c, Alex Remennikov d
a
School of Engineering and Information Technology, The University of New South Wales, Canberra, ACT, 2600, Australia
b
Department of Civil Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, General Sir John Kotelawala Defence University, Ratmalana, Sri Lanka
c
School of Civil Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, The University of Sydney, Darlington, NSW, 2006, Australia
d
Centre for Infrastructure Protection and Mining Safety, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, NSW, 2522, Australia

Abstract


Incorporating elastomers such as polymers in protective structures to withstand high energetic dynamic loads, has gained significant interest. The main objective of this study is to investigate the influence of a Polyurea coating towards the blast-induced response in steel plates. As such, Polyurea coated steel plates were tested under near-field blast loads, produced by the detonation of 1 kg of spherical nitromethane charges, at a standoff distance of 150 mm. Mild steel (XLERPLATE 350) and high-strength steel (BIS80) plates with thicknesses of 10 mm were Polyurea coated with thicknesses of 6 mm and 12 mm on either the front (facing the charge) or the back face. The deformation profiles were measured using 3D scanning. Numerical simulations were performed using the non-linear finite element code LS-DYNA. The strain-dependent behaviour of the steel and Polyurea were represented by Johnson-cook and Money-Rivlin constitutive models, respectively. The numerical models were validated by comparing the plate deflection results obtained from the experiments and were then used in the subsequent parametric study to investigate the optimum thickness of the Polyurea coating. The results indicate that back face coating contributes towards an approximately 20% reduction in the residual deformation as well as the absence of melting of the Polyurea layer, while the front-face coating can be used a means of providing additional standoff distance to the steel plates.

Keywords
Polyurea coating
Near-field blast
LS-DYNA
Plate deformation
ALE



Description



   

Indexed in scopus

https://www.scopus.com/authid/detail.uri?authorId=55654148000
      

Article metrics

10.31763/DSJ.v5i1.1674 Abstract views : | PDF views :

   

Cite

   

Full Text

Download

Conflict of interest


“Authors state no conflict of interest”


Funding Information


This research received no external funding or grants


Peer review:


Peer review under responsibility of Defence Science Journal


Ethics approval:


Not applicable.


Consent for publication:


Not applicable.


Acknowledgements:


None.