This invention pertains to strand-style body armor (body armor strand material, or structure), to the methods for it making, and to the armoring performance offered by the proposed structure.
There is a pronounced effort currently underway to develop extremely light-weight body armor which can defeat dangerous projectiles, such as bullets. The present invention addresses this issue in a quite effective and non-intuitive manner by proposing that body armor be formed by extremely light-weight elongate strand structure, formed by elongate, slender strands which, effectively, are made of a unique “ductile ceramic” material, preferably based upon titanium. These strands include brittle ceramic outside surface structure which joins through a continuous, internal, brittle/ductile transition region to a central, ductile core region. Various transverse cross-sectional configurations may be employed, each of which preferably defines plural elongate, sharp-angle edges that run the length of each strand. Several of these configurations are illustrated and described herein.
As will be seen, the proposed armor strands may be assembled for “presentation” to the path of an oncoming projectile in various ways. Two such ways are shown and described herein, one of which involves a weave of strands, and the other of which involves a fabric-contained random and chaotic jumble of short, freely mixed “strandlets”.
The strands of this invention respond to an impacting projectile: (a) by first cutting the projectile into pieces as a consequence of projectile engagement with the sharp ceramic edges extending along the outside lengths of the strands; (b) by then undergoing ceramic fragmentation to dissipate projectile energy; and (c) by telegraphing such ceramic fragmentation through the above-mentioned brittle/ductile transition regions to the ductile cores of the strands which then deform elastically to produce further energy dissipation.
Various other features and advantages of the invention will become more fully apparent as the detailed description below is read in conjunction with the drawings.
Turning now to the drawings, and beginning with a look at
Strand 20 has been made by extrusion preferably from a titanium starter, or precursor, material known as Tiadyne™3510, made by ATI Wah Chang in Albany, Oreg. This principally titanium material is ductile in character, and can be prepared into different shapes and configurations by various conventional manufacturing techniques, such as casting, machining, extruding, etc. In
In accordance with the invention, however, strand 20 has been further processed, as by baking in an oven at a temperature of about 1700° F. and in an oxidizing atmosphere, or environment, for a time range typically of about 5 minutes to about 1 hour, at user's selection, depending upon the depth of surface processing desired, to create what is referred to as a brittle, ceramic surface structure 20b of titanium dioxide. Creation of this surface structure produces an important internal structure within the strand, characterized by “blending” non-discontinuously of surface structure 20b, through an intermediary brittle/ductile transition region, or structure, 20c, to a central, ductile core structure 20d which contains axis 20a.
Important to note in the structure of strand 20 is that its outside surface includes plural, sharp-angular, elongate edges 20e defined by the intersection of pairs of faces, or facial expanses, 20f which, in the strand structure illustrated in
Turning attention now to
With attention now directed to
With a fabric like fabric 34 properly created to produce what is referred to herein as a mass of elongate armor strand elements, and with its broad impact face and the associated sharp edges of stands 34a, 34b, facing the path of an incoming attack projectile, upon impact of that projectile the brittle, ceramic, sharp edges cut the projectile into pieces, with these pieces engaging and plastically fragmenting the outside surfaces of many adjacent strands. This ceramic fragmentation acts instantly to dissipate the energies of the now cut projectile pieces, and fragmentation events are telegraphed through the associated brittle/ductile transition regions in the involved strands, where what next occurs is non-fragmentary ductile yielding, and thus further energy dissipating furnished by the associated ductile strand core regions.
Thus, instead of a projectile being met by a single (one-time only) fragmentable energy dissipating structure, that projectile is divided by cutting it into many pieces, whose individual trajectories aim them for impact to a rich field of yet unfragmented, and thus available hardened ceramic fragmentation surfaces, additional cutting edges, and additional ductile yield responses. This is especially the case where fully assembled protective armor is formed of plural “stacked” fabric layers.
Strandlet 36 has been processed as described for strand 20 so that it has a brittle, ceramic, four-cornered outside surface which joins through a brittle/ductile transition region to a ductile core region adjacent axis 36a.
When assembled into a fully ready body armor structure, a large mass of strandlets 36 are appropriately gathered into what is referred to herein as a random, chaotic jumble, such as that shown at 38 in
Thus, disclosed herein are a novel strand-form body armor material, a method for making it, a method utilizing it to disable an impacting projectile, and a unique response-performance provided by it for defeating an impacting projectile.
The strand material of the invention includes (a) a strand body possessing an elongate brittle ceramic surface structure, (b) an elongate ductile core structure disposed within that surface structure, and (c) elongate brittle/ductile transition structure operatively interposed and joining the surface and core structures. This strand material may be employed, for examples, as a random mass of short strandlets deployed in a suitable container, and as a woven fabric structure formed from long stretches of the strand material.
The method utilizing the strand material for disabling an impacting projectile includes the steps of preparing a defined mass of elongate ceramic-surfaced, ductile-cored strand elements, each including, along the outside of its length, elongate, sharp-angular edges, and placing that mass in the impact path of such a projectile in a manner whereby edges in the strands face the projectile impact path.
The response performance of the strand material includes using fragmentation of the surface-hardened ceramic material to dissipate energy, cutting an impacting projectile into fragments and deflecting those fragments, and telegraphing fragmentation of the ceramic material through a brittle/ductile region in the strand material to a ductile core-region wherein resulting deformation of this core region further dissipates projectile energy,
From the description and illustrations provided herein, those skilled in the relevant art will recognize, that variations and modifications may be made without departing from the spirit of the invention, and all such variations and modifications are intended to come within the scopes of the claims herein.
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