Experimental Simulation of Deformation Effect Propagation Due to Explosion on the Surface of a Small-Scale Model
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Determination of Explosion Energy
- C—based on small-scale measurements, C = 1033 represents the ratio between time and radius;
- ρ—ambient air density;
- r; t—measured data.
2.2. Seismic Wave Types
- Longitudinal P-waves—primary. These are the fastest type of waves and reach the accelerometers first. Both P-waves and pressure waves move in the same direction. The material that is affected by a pressure wave moves forward and then back along the same path as the wave when it reaches a certain point.
- Transverse S-waves—secondary. In the case of accelerometers, they arrive as secondary signals. When the wave passes through the material, the point of propagation moves from side to side or up and down.
- Love waves—surface waves. Like S-waves they oscillate the surface from side to side in the direction they propagate.
- Rayleigh waves—the second type of surface waves. As a result, the surface moves simultaneously in both vertical and horizontal directions. Due to their potential for causing significant damage to buildings and other structures, these waves are extremely dangerous [12].
2.3. Explosives
2.3.1. Pyrotechnic Compositions
2.3.2. Fireworks
- Category F1—this category is considered to be very low risk and noise levels are negligible. Only persons over the age of 15 are permitted to purchase this product. This includes, e.g., sparklers, fountains, and buzzers.
- Category F2—represents a low level of danger and minimal noise levels.A person must be at least 18 years of age in order to purchase this product. Among these items are, for example, cannons, rockets, compacts, and fountains.
- Category F3—presents a medium level of danger and the noise level is not harmful to human health. The product is only available to persons over the age of 21. A few examples of this type of fireworks would be firecrackers, compacts and rockets.
- Category F4—a major level of danger is associated with this category, which includes professional pyrotechnics that are available only to qualified users [14].
2.3.3. K01M Booming Carpet
2.4. Experimental Measurement
2.4.1. Description of Measurement Equipment
2.4.2. Small-Scale Model
2.4.3. Measurement Methodology
2.4.4. Determination of the Scaling Coefficient
3. Results
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Frequency | Amplitude 1 m·s−2 | Amplitude 2 m·s−2 |
---|---|---|
15.92 Hz | 1.1813 | 2.3387 |
40 Hz | 1.4208 | 2.7480 |
80 Hz | 1.4085 | 2.7809 |
0 Hz | 1.3988 | 2.7759 |
320 Hz | 1.3897 | 2.7599 |
640 Hz | 1.4201 | 2.7716 |
1280 Hz | 1.4053 | 2.7592 |
Frequency | Amplitude 1 m·s−2 | Amplitude 2 m·s−2 |
---|---|---|
15.92 Hz | 32.631 | 62.751 |
40 Hz | 32.736 | 63.163 |
80 Hz | 31.959 | 62.595 |
160 Hz | 30.902 | 62.066 |
320 Hz | 30.832 | 62.511 |
640 Hz | 31.238 | 63.855 |
1280 Hz | 31.424 | 62.525 |
Frequency | Ratio CSV/WAV 1 m·s–2 | Ratio CSV/WAV 2 m·s–2 |
---|---|---|
15.92 Hz | 3.62018 × 10–5 | 3.72695 × 10–5 |
40 Hz | 4.34018 × 10–5 | 4.35065 × 10–5 |
80 Hz | 4.40721 × 10–5 | 4.44269 × 10–5 |
160 Hz | 4.52657 × 10–5 | 4.47250 × 10–5 |
320 Hz | 4.50733 × 10–5 | 4.41506 × 10–5 |
640 Hz | 4.54607 × 10–5 | 4.34046 × 10–5 |
1280 Hz | 4.47206 × 10–5 | 4.41295 × 10–5 |
Average: | 4.34566 × 10–5 | 4.30875 × 10–5 |
Final coefficient: | 4.3272 × 10–5 |
Maximum Amplitude | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Accelerometer 1 | Accelerometer 2 | Accelerometer 3 | Accelerometer 4 | Accelerometer 5 | |
Measurement No.1 | 71.860 | 55.928 | 29.723 | 19.602 | 13.276 |
Measurement No.2 | 51.600 | 50.000 | 20.848 | 16.176 | 12.559 |
Measurement No.3 | 87.200 | 56.100 | 17.456 | 14.600 | 12.196 |
Measurement No.4 | 86.400 | 54.900 | 22.384 | 21.030 | 13.216 |
Measurement No.5 | 67.500 | 51.100 | 19.134 | 17.848 | 16.873 |
Measurement No.6 | 39.762 | 32.391 | 27.452 | 22.000 | 17.248 |
Measurement No.7 | 51.800 | 47.200 | 46.600 | 41.106 | 26.651 |
Measurement No.8 | 60.700 | 43.700 | 33.099 | 26.171 | 22.750 |
Measurement No.9 | 25.737 | 43.900 | 13.322 | 9.110 | 6.868 |
Measurement No.10 | 44.100 | 18.827 | 13.205 | 10.713 | 6.845 |
Measurement No.11 | 48.700 | 29.779 | 9.406 | 8.743 | 6.092 |
Measurement No.12 | 45.400 | 23.395 | 21.538 | 13.041 | 10.611 |
Measurement No.13 | 55.000 | 22.376 | 10.584 | 10.313 | 8.211 |
Measurement No.14 | 57.100 | 27.925 | 14.023 | 10.470 | 7.439 |
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Papán, D.; Brozová, E.; Papánová, Z. Experimental Simulation of Deformation Effect Propagation Due to Explosion on the Surface of a Small-Scale Model. Buildings 2023, 13, 1566. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13061566
Papán D, Brozová E, Papánová Z. Experimental Simulation of Deformation Effect Propagation Due to Explosion on the Surface of a Small-Scale Model. Buildings. 2023; 13(6):1566. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13061566
Chicago/Turabian StylePapán, Daniel, Emma Brozová, and Zuzana Papánová. 2023. "Experimental Simulation of Deformation Effect Propagation Due to Explosion on the Surface of a Small-Scale Model" Buildings 13, no. 6: 1566. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13061566
APA StylePapán, D., Brozová, E., & Papánová, Z. (2023). Experimental Simulation of Deformation Effect Propagation Due to Explosion on the Surface of a Small-Scale Model. Buildings, 13(6), 1566. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13061566