Evaluation of blast mitigation performance of cylindrical explosion containment vessels based on water containers

•Influence of bulk water on mitigation performance from blast experiments was analyzed.•Bulk water can significantly reduce the deformation of CECVs under internal blast loading.•The FEM results of structural deformation agree well with the experimental results.•The significant mitigation mechanisms...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inInternational journal of impact engineering Vol. 181; p. 104729
Main Authors Yang, Lei, Wang, Tao, Bian, Xiao-bing, Huang, Guang-yan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.11.2023
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Summary:•Influence of bulk water on mitigation performance from blast experiments was analyzed.•Bulk water can significantly reduce the deformation of CECVs under internal blast loading.•The FEM results of structural deformation agree well with the experimental results.•The significant mitigation mechanisms of bulk water were discussed. Using liquid materials with specific geometries can enhance the explosion-proof properties of confined structures. This approach is promising because bulk water has multiple blast mitigation mechanisms and adds almost no extra mass. In this study, a method of using water-filled containers to reduce both the peak and permanent deformation of cylindrical explosion containment vessels (CECVs) is investigated through experiments and numerical simulations. Several explosion experiments were performed to evaluate the blast mitigation of the empty containers and the bulk water with multiple thicknesses and heights in terms of dynamic deformation and afterburning suppression. The experimental results indicated that the bulk water with a larger thickness and a smaller height had better protective performance, which provided up to an 80.1% reduction in permanent deformation compared with no mitigant. Numerical models were established using LS-DYNA and verified by the deformation-time history curves measured in the experiments. The energy conversion process during the explosion was analyzed through the numerical simulations, and the results showed that water absorbed most of the detonation energy that should have been transferred to the steel shell, proving that momentum extraction of water was a significant mitigation mechanism for the internal blast in CECVs. Another significant mitigation mechanism was the shadowing effect of water, which changed the spatial distribution of the blast loading acting on the steel shell, especially for water containers with larger thickness and smaller height.
ISSN:0734-743X
1879-3509
DOI:10.1016/j.ijimpeng.2023.104729