3.2. Dynamic Response of Composite Concrete Structures to Reactive Jet Penetration
The dynamic response of the composite concrete structures subjected to reactive jet penetration is depicted in
Figure 13. During penetration, the concrete at the penetration interface was damaged by jet compression, at the same time, the concrete medium near the axis of symmetry fractured under the combined action of the radial and circumferential tensile stresses, resulting in the formation and expansion of microcracks.
Figure 13a illustrates the initial state of the jet penetration and compression wave propagation.
An initial compression wave was generated by the jet at point
O, causing compressive damage along the axial direction of the concrete material. When the reactive jet penetrated the target, ignoring the internal pressure of the material itself, the pressure at the projectile–target interface was derived using the Bernoulli equation:
where
P0 represents the initial pressure of the incoming compression wavefront,
ρj is the density of the jet material,
vj is the velocity of the jet tip, and
u is the penetration velocity induced in the target by the impact of the jet.
The initial compression wave exhibited an exponential decay. When it propagated to any point A(a,0) within the concrete, its intensity decreased to [
36]:
where
PA is the pressure of the compression wavefront at point A,
a is the distance of the wavefront propagation, and
γ is the attenuation coefficient of the target material.
At this point, the stress distribution due to the concentrated load on the concrete layer was tracked as:
where,
σX,
σY, and
σθ represent the axial, radial, and circumferential stresses, respectively.
r is the radial distance,
ϕ is the angle, and
μ is the Poisson’s ratio of the concrete material.
Near the free surface of the concrete, the radial stress was tensile:
where,
y represents the radial distances, respectively. When the radial stress,
σY, reached the tensile strength,
σt, initial cracks started to form.
More intricately, when the compaction wave reached the interface between the concrete and gravel materials, reflection and transmission occurred. This disturbance disrupts the stable penetration stress state within the target, as illustrated in
Figure 13b. Given that the wave impedance of concrete,
ρcCc, exceeded that of the gravel material,
ρgCg, effectively transitioning from a “hard” to a “soft” material, the arrival of the compression wave at the interface generated reflected tensile rarefaction waves within the concrete layer. These waves exerted a negative pressure,
Ps, which was directly proportional to the intensity of
PA. When the tensile pressure,
Ps, surpassed the tensile strength,
σt, the back side of the concrete experienced tensile fracturing, creating tensile cracks. The dynamic response process of the composite concrete structure under penetration is depicted in
Figure 14.
The dynamic damage results of the composite concrete structure under penetration are shown in
Figure 15. Initially, the concrete layer developed a central penetration hole due to the high-pressure penetration of the jet, leading to compressive damage around the edge of the hole. Subsequently, initial cracks appeared on the front side of the layer, and the back side of the concrete layer developed tensile cracks, caused by the reflected tensile waves.
During the penetration process, the pressure changes at the gauge points that were 20 cm from the penetration center within the concrete are illustrated in
Figure 16. Initially, the concrete was subjected to the penetration of the jet, causing an immediate increase in the internal pressure and compressive damage. Following this, the pressure decreased under the effect of the reflected rarefaction waves. When the pressure dropped below
σt, the concrete went through tensile damage. Subsequently, the pressure within the target fluctuated under the combined action of penetration compression and reflected tension.
Upon reaching the reaction delay time,
τ, the penetration depth of the reactive jet is shown in
Figure 17, and the damage results of the concrete layer are presented in
Figure 18. At the reaction delay time,
τ, as the thickness of the concrete layer increased, the length of tensile cracks on the back side and the diameter of the penetration hole gradually decreased, while the lengths of the initial cracks on the front side remained essentially consistent. According to Equation (13), under identical conditions, the initial cracks on the front side depended solely on the impact pressure,
P0, hence the consistency in the crack length. Conversely, the lengths of the cracks on the back side correlated with the tensile pressure,
Ps. As the thickness of the concrete layer increased, it took longer for the compression wave to reach the reflective interface. Within the same reaction time, the shorter duration of action by the reflective pressure,
Ps, resulted in lesser tensile damage on the back side, leading to shorter crack lengths.
3.3. Explosion-Enhanced Damage Analysis
At the moment
τ, when the reactive jet underwent an explosive reaction, the material model employed the JWL parameters for PTFE/Al, as listed in
Table 7. The mass of the reactive materials was determined based on the mass of the reactive jet. Given that the tip of the jet is a high-temperature, high-pressure zone during penetration, it was assumed that the tip of the reactive jet reacts first. As shown in
Figure 17, at the moment
τ, varying thicknesses led to different penetration depths. The spatial distribution of the reactive jet is depicted in
Figure 19, with the mass fraction distribution of the reactive materials provided in
Table 9. The varying thicknesses of the concrete layers led to differences in the jet penetration depths, subsequently resulting in different spatial mass distributions of the reactive materials, which is one of the fundamental reasons for the variation in the damage results.
For Hc = 250 mm and Hc = 350 mm, the damage can be divided into two parts: (1) within the concrete layer, the mass m1 of the reactive material caused a compressive expansion effect upon explosion. The explosive shock pressure, P1, exerted radial pressure on the concrete layer, leading to partial crushing zones. The diameter of the central penetration hole increased and fragmented concrete was ejected. Eventually, a funnel crater was formed. Additionally, the propagation of the compression waves in the concrete during penetration caused fine radial cracks to extend further due to circumferential stress, forming radiating radial cracks. The width and number of these cracks were directly related to the magnitude of the circumferential stress. (2) In the cement stabilized gravel layer, the mass, m2, of the reactive material exploded and produced an expansion effect. At this juncture, the explosive shock pressure, P2, generated an upward axial pressure on the concrete layer, leading to the formation of the bulge in the concrete layer. When the stress at the focus of dynamic load exceeded the tensile strength of the concrete layer, the layer fractured, forming circumferential cracks.
For the
Hc = 450 mm composite concrete structure, only the first part of the damage occurred, with no second part. The pressures,
P1 and
P2, can be determined using the following formula [
20]:
where
Cv is the specific heat capacity at the constant volume of the reactive material, and
m1 and
m2 are the masses of the reactive material in the concrete and gravel layers, respectively.
After 2000 μs of the explosion of the reactive materials, the dynamic damage results of the concrete layer under the explosion-enhanced effect are shown in
Figure 20. To clearly observe the funnel crater of the concrete, the image was processed for enhanced clarity through grayscale adjustment. Compared with penetration damage, the explosion enhancement led to an expansion effect in the central penetration hole, enlarging the hole diameter. Concrete near the explosion center developed cracks. Over time, the fragmented concrete materials were ejected, forming the funnel craters observed in the experimental results.
According to reference [
37], the
δb of the concrete layer under the effect of an internal explosion can be expressed as:
where
A is a constant,
represents the average load pressure,
is the effective duration of the load,
ρ is the density of the concrete layer, and
h is the thickness of the concrete layer.
From Equations (14) and (15), it is evident that the
δb was directly proportional to the mass of the reactive material and inversely proportional to the thickness of the concrete layer. This correlation was consistent with the results from the numerical simulations. As shown in
Figure 20a, a noticeable bulge and bending damage occurred in the 250 mm concrete layer, with the experimental circumferential crack diameter
Rc = 330 cm, while the numerical simulation showed a stress-concentration diameter of
Rc = 304 cm, aligning closely with the experimental values.
Figure 20c indicates that the 450 mm concrete layer exhibited almost no bulge. The axial velocity changed over time at the center of the concrete layer, as shown in
Figure 21, revealing that both the 250 mm and 350 mm concrete layers experienced a significant step-like negative axial velocity gradient from the explosion center to the edges, leading to a bulge formation that was higher in the center and lower on the sides. Furthermore, the velocity gradient in the 250 mm concrete layer was larger than that in the 350 mm layer, resulting in a more pronounced bulge. Conversely, the 450 mm concrete layer showed almost no negative axial velocity, hence no bulge formation occurred.
The comparison between the numerical simulation results and the experimental results is shown in
Figure 22, and the error values are shown in
Table 10. It was indicated that the maximum error for the
Dp is 13.3%, and for the
Dc is 12.9%. By taking the numerical simulation results from
Figure 20, the diameter of the damage zone where Damage = 1 was
Rdamage. The comparison of the penetration hole diameters
Dp and the damage zone diameters
Rdamage between the numerical simulations of the reactive jet penetration and explosion-enhanced damage, as depicted in
Figure 23, showed that under the dynamic damage from explosion enhancement, the central penetration diameter
Dp increased by an average of 116% and the damage zone diameter
Rdamage increased by an average of 59.7%.
Based on the mechanism analysis, the dynamic damage process of composite concrete structures under the combined action of reactive jet penetration and explosion enhancement mainly includes three stages: jet formation, kinetic energy penetration damage, and explosion-enhanced damage.
(1) Jet formation stage: Under the detonation impact of the shaped charge, the reactive liner collapses and collides along its axis, forming a high-speed jet. This stage initiates the penetration process by concentrating the energy into a focused stream, capable of penetrating the target material at high velocities.
(2) Kinetic energy penetration stage: Before the time reaches τ, the reactive jet is considered to be in an inert state. Utilizing its kinetic energy, the high-speed jet penetrates the composite concrete structure, creating a central penetration hole. During this stage, the concrete layer experiences both compressive shock waves, initiated by the jet penetration, and tensile rarefaction waves reflected from the rear, leading to the formation of pre-damage cracks.
(3) Explosion-enhanced damage stage: After the time reaches τ, the reactive jet undergoes an explosive reaction, releasing chemical energy and generating shock waves that propagate outward, along with a significant volume of gas products. Under the combined dynamic load of the shock wave and the explosive products, the central penetration hole enlarges, causing fragmentation and a funnel crater in the concrete layer. Simultaneously, circumferential tensile stresses within the concrete layer further extend pre-damage cracks into radial cracks. In the thinner concrete layers, the jet penetrates through to the gravel layer, and the concrete layer rises from the center to the edges under the explosive action. If the concentrated stress exceeds the flexural strength of the concrete, the concrete breaks at the stress concentration points, forming circumferential cracks. For thicker concrete layers, the reactive jet is unable to reach the gravel layer, resulting only in explosive expansion of the penetration hole and the funnel crater without any bulge in the concrete layer.