학술논문

Quarter-scale close-in blast-loading experiments in support of the planned contained firing facility
Document Type
Conference
Author
Source
Conference: 26. Department of Defense explosives safety seminar,Miami, FL (United States),16-18 Aug 1994; Other Information: PBD: 27 Jul 1994
Subject
45 MILITARY TECHNOLOGY, WEAPONRY, AND NATIONAL DEFENSE CONTAINED EXPLOSIONS
BLAST EFFECTS
REINFORCED CONCRETE
FLOORS
DESIGN
STRAIN GAGES 450100
CHEMICAL EXPLOSIONS AND EXPLOSIVES
Language
English
Abstract
In anticipation of increasingly stringent environmental regulations, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory is proposing to construct a 60-kg firing chamber to provide blast-effects containment for most of its open-air, high-explosive, firing operations. Even though the Laboratory`s operations are within current environmental limits, containment of the blast effects and hazardous debris will drastically reduce emissions to the environment and minimize the generated hazardous waste. One of the main design considerations is the extremely close-in (Z = 0.66 ft/lb{sup l/3}) blast loading on the reinforced concrete ff the chamber. Historically, floor damage due to close-in loading has been a common problem for other blast chambers within the US Department of Energy and Department of Defense (DOE/DoD). Blast-effects testing and computer analysis were conducted on a replica quarter-scale model of the preliminary floor design. Nineteen blast tests ranging from scaled distances of 1.14 ft/lb{sup l/3} (25%) to 0.57ft/lb{sup 1/3} (200%) were performed on the strain-gaged floor model. In response to predicted and measured failures at the 25% level, various state-of-the-art blast attenuation systems were quickly developed and tested. The most effective blast-attenuation system provided a significant improvement by reducing the measured floor stresses to acceptable levels while minimizing, by its reusability, the impact on the environment.