The influence of structural arrangement on long-duration blast response of annealed glazing
The influence of structural arrangement on long-duration blast response of annealed glazing
This paper investigates the influence of structural arrangement on long-duration blast loaded annealed glazing via variable thickness, area, aspect ratio and edge support conditions. Initially, the findings of eighteen full-scale air-blast trials employing 33 annealed glazing panels are reported where it is demonstrated that fracture mode and fragmentation are a strong function of edge supports. Rigidly clamped edges are shown to induce localised stress transmission, producing significant cracking and small fragments. In contrast, elastic edges are shown to produce large, angular fragments, demonstrating the importance of accurately modelling edge conditions when analysing fragment hazard. Quantification of peak centre panel deflection and breakage time is then presented where variable results indicate the influence of edge supports and aspect ratio to be dependent on proximity to the threshold area as a function of glazing thickness. An initial Applied Element Method (AEM) analysis is then employed to model the influence of structural arrangement on long-duration blast-loaded annealed glazing. AEM models are shown to reasonably predict glazing fragmentation behaviour, breakage time and peak panel deflection at the moment of breakage. Thus indicating AEM's potential suitability to provide a predictive capacity for annealed glazing response during long-duration blast.
370-388
Johns, Robert
e656156c-82ba-4d80-8be2-e7c168c34462
Clubley, Simon
d3217801-61eb-480d-a6a7-5873b5f6f0fd
15 October 2016
Johns, Robert
e656156c-82ba-4d80-8be2-e7c168c34462
Clubley, Simon
d3217801-61eb-480d-a6a7-5873b5f6f0fd
Johns, Robert and Clubley, Simon
(2016)
The influence of structural arrangement on long-duration blast response of annealed glazing.
International Journal of Solids and Structures, 97-98, .
(doi:10.1016/j.ijsolstr.2016.07.012).
Abstract
This paper investigates the influence of structural arrangement on long-duration blast loaded annealed glazing via variable thickness, area, aspect ratio and edge support conditions. Initially, the findings of eighteen full-scale air-blast trials employing 33 annealed glazing panels are reported where it is demonstrated that fracture mode and fragmentation are a strong function of edge supports. Rigidly clamped edges are shown to induce localised stress transmission, producing significant cracking and small fragments. In contrast, elastic edges are shown to produce large, angular fragments, demonstrating the importance of accurately modelling edge conditions when analysing fragment hazard. Quantification of peak centre panel deflection and breakage time is then presented where variable results indicate the influence of edge supports and aspect ratio to be dependent on proximity to the threshold area as a function of glazing thickness. An initial Applied Element Method (AEM) analysis is then employed to model the influence of structural arrangement on long-duration blast-loaded annealed glazing. AEM models are shown to reasonably predict glazing fragmentation behaviour, breakage time and peak panel deflection at the moment of breakage. Thus indicating AEM's potential suitability to provide a predictive capacity for annealed glazing response during long-duration blast.
Text
Johns R and Clubley S - The Influence of Structural Arrangement on Long-Duration Blast Response of Annealed Glazing.pdf
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 6 July 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 9 July 2016
Published date: 15 October 2016
Organisations:
Infrastructure Group
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 386796
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/386796
ISSN: 0020-7683
PURE UUID: edf4573e-f0f4-4e92-b6e3-670ff32378ab
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Date deposited: 04 Feb 2016 16:11
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 22:38
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Author:
Robert Johns
Author:
Simon Clubley
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