Now imagine the potential destruction of
an artillery shell made almost entirely
of that stuff.
Such a theoretical weapon is one of the
goals behind the research being conducted by Picatinny Arsenal engineers working at the Advanced Materials
Lab.
In conventional artillery shells, the
explosive force generated upon detonation causes the warhead to break apart.
The resulting fragments flung out in all directions are great speed explains
how these weapons cause their damage.
But the potential destructive force is
increased dramatically with capabilities of reactive materials that can be
formed and strengthened to replace the inert materials that make up the rest of
the warhead.
The reactive materials form the
structure of the warhead rather than simply being loaded into the warhead.
“Structured reactive materials , or SRM,
will enhance the lethality of current and future weapons while maintaining or
reducing the payload,” said Paul Redner, a materials engineer with the Advanced
Materials Lab.
“Unlike with more traditional (reactive
materials), SRM will be a direct one-to-one replacement of inert components.”
The engineers have already made progress
in the research, yet challenges remain.
“Despite all of the positive results and
lofty goals mentioned above, nothing is ever that simple,” said Redner. Among
the challenges that researchers are working to overcome, the greatest is how to
process components to form more complex shapes.
Through collaboration with other labs,
including the Office of Naval Research , researchers are seeking solutions to
these technical challenges.
Advances in structured reactive
materials are made possible through the continued development of nanomaterials
at Picatinny’s state-of-the-art lab, which was established to make viable
technologies ready for transition to development programs.
“We wish that people would ask to see
how we fabricate nanoscaled and nanostructured powders, and how we establish
the pedigree for our materials,” Redner said.
“We have a wide variety of capabilities
and we are open to talk to the ARDEC, PEO Ammunition and the project management
communities any time.”
Written
by Jason Kaneshiro from www.army.mil.
No comments:
Post a Comment