This invention relates to body armor structure, to methodology associated with this structure, and to performance characteristics of the structure. According to the invention, armor is formed utilizing thin-plate-like elements each having (a) a projectile strike face which, along with the integrated structure immediately adjacent it, is a hardened ceramic material, (b) an opposite face which, along with the integrated structure immediately adjacent it, is ductile in character, and (c) intermediate these ceramic and ductile materials, a continuous, brittle/ductile interface, or transition, zone. Thus, and especially to be noted about the structure of the invention, the opposite faces of the invention plate-like elements are dramatically different in character, and include (a) hardened, brittle ceramic, (b) ductile, and (c) brittle/ductile transition, regions. For purposes of illustration herein, the armor elements of this invention are presented as being tile-like in form. Though this is a preferable form of the invention, it is not a necessary form.
Preferably, the basic substance forming the armor structure just briefly outlined is titanium. With respect to the “elements” proposed by the invention, these can be thought of as taking the form of tiles which may have various different perimeter outlines, such as square, circular, hexagonal, and many others, etc. Dimensions associated with this perimeter can be varied to suit different applications, but typical might be that a square-perimeter tile has a side length of about 3-inches, with the same being the case for the diameter of a circular-perimeter tile.
Thickness can be different, and can be varied within the structure of a particular tile to suit different applications. So also choosable and selectively variable are the depth/thickness configurations of the mentioned brittle, transitional, and ductile regions within a tile.
A very suitable base material for the armor structure of this invention is an initally ductile titanium product called Tiadyne™ 3510 manufactured by ATI Wah Chang which is based in Albany, Oreg.
Generally speaking,
In particular,
Turning now to the drawings,
A double-headed arrow 12 illustrates the recognition that transition region 10e can have different, basic, overall positional dispositions (placements) within the thickness of tile 10 relative to opposite faces 10a, 10b. Two double-headed arrows 14, 16 illustrate the further recognition that one side or the other, or both, of region 10e can be positioned variously (by user choice) within the thickness of tile 10. The internal interfaces between these three layer regions, which regions collectively form what is referred to herein as a unitary material body, are continuous, in the sense that there is no sharp material discontinuity between next-adjacent regions. The internal structure of tile 10 is thus seen to progress from shatter-prone (face 10a, region 10c) to ductile (face 10b, region 10d).
Beginning with the above-mentioned ductile titanium material as a precursor material, tiles of this material having the thickness and perimetral outline decided upon by the user/designer are initially formed in any suitable, conventional manner.
Following this formation, one face only of a thus pre-formed tile structure is unconventionally (from one aide only) processed, as by heating in a controlled, oxidizing environment, to form in each tile the desired depth/configuration brittle ceramic region (herein titanium oxide) which is purposely developed, as just suggested above, on one side, and from one face, only, of the precursor tile. This is an important practice of the present invention, which practice yields a unique armor tile structure, wherein one side is a hardened, brittle ceramic material, the opposite side remains as a ductile material, and there is a continuous, brittle/ductile, interfacial transition region between these two other, very different regions. As will be seen, this formation practice, and the end-result structure which it produces, avoids the presence of any material characteristic other than ductility to exist on that side of a tile which is opposite its brittle ceramic side. Conventional, allover surface oxidizing would not accomplish this important end result.
The armoring behavior which results from this processing approach will now be described.
Fragmentation of region 10c is telegraphed through the brittle/ductile transition region 10e to ductile region 10d which deflects and deforms, yieldingly and elastically, further to dissipate bullet energy. This action is referred to herein as one utilizing a ductile elastic yield mechanism. The elastic yield response of region 10d is not hampered in any way by the presence of any other internal region “beyond” it as defined by tile face 10b. In other words, no material back-up is required to be placed adjacent tile face 10b.
By using different opposing facial characteristics in the tile structure of this invention, it is possible to employ the armoring qualities of the structure of the invention to design the specific manner in which a projectile's attack may be foiled. These possibilities include shaping the manner in which impact energy is addressed, and deflecting a projectile's post-initial-impact trajectory significantly.
These fabrics are merely suggestive of the many ways in which the structure of the present invention may easily and conveniently be deployed to form large body-armor expanses.
Thus, a novel body armor element structure (preferably, though not necessarily, in a tile form), methodology, and performance have been illustrated and described. A key feature in the structure of the invention is that armor elements made according to it are characterized by a unique through-element transitioning characteristic, including a hardened ceramic strike side, a ductile opposite side, and a brittle/ductile transition zone bridging these two sides.
The methodology of the invention features the steps of responding to a projectile impact first with a fragmentation energy-dissipating mechanism, and thereafter augmenting such responding with a ductile elastic yield mechanism. This methodology further includes the step of telegraphing the responding action through a brittle/ductile transition region in the structure of the invention to engage the ductile elastic yield mechanism.
Those skilled in the art may well determine that variations and modifications of the invention beyond those specifically presented herein may be made fully within the scope of the invention, and the claims herein are intended to encompass all such variations and modifications.