Ballistic Resistant Fabric Armor
A woven ballistic resistant fabric armor system comprising at least one ply having a yarn-yarn angle between the warp and fill yarns of less than 90°, with each ply oriented relative to an axis along the thickness of the plies such that adjacent plies have a different yarn-yarn angle, a different orientation, or both. The armor system may feature materials of different stiffness, strength, and strain-to-failure in each ply or a filler between selected plies, including a filler comprising discrete pieces of fabric ply that fit within the cell periphery of a stitching pattern.
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This invention claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/113,412, titled “BALLISTIC RESISTANT FABRIC ARMOR,” filed Nov. 11, 2008, incorporated in its entirety herein by reference.
FIELD OF INVENTIONThe present invention relates, generally to an energy dissipating system, broadly to an armor arrangement, and specifically to a filament-based, woven fabric arrangement used in protective clothing against ballistic projectiles. Applications of the is present invention include, but are not limited to personnel body armor, turbine fragment containment systems in airplane fuselages, and spall liners in military vehicles.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONProtective clothing or armor is needed by personnel whose line of work involves being directly subjected to impact by high velocity projectiles that include bullets, pellets, and shrapnel. Penetration by these projectiles into the human body causes fatality by massive internal bleeding and organ failure. The primary goal of the protective clothing is to retard the projectile's motion without the projectile being able to completely penetrate through the protective clothing. One important constraint that must be satisfied while accomplishing this goal is to ensure the dynamic deflection or back face deformation of the protective clothing is kept to a minimum to prevent blunt force trauma injuries. Such injuries can also be fatal. The limit of back face deformation is set forth in the National Institute of Justice (NIJ) Standards to be a maximum of 1.73 inches or 44 millimeters. Protective clothing should also be kept to a minimum thickness so that it is flexible enough to be comfortably worn on the human torso, especially around the extremities, without restricting any motion of the limbs, and that if needed, it can be concealed underneath regular clothing. Further, it should be as lightweight as possible so that it does not exhaust or diminish the performance of the personnel in the line of work. Finally, it should be able to dissipate heat and moisture and allow for ventilation to keep the human body cool and prevent dehydration.
Many arrangements for flexible ballistic resistant fabric armor comprised of high strength and high stiffness woven yarns are known. Non-limiting examples of such high performance materials include aramid fibers, such as KEVLAR® aramid fibers, manufactured by E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company, of Wilmington, Del. and TWARON® aramid fibers, manufactured by Teijin Aramid B.V. of the Netherlands; PBO (poly (phenylene benzobizoxazole)) fibers, such as ZYLON® PBO fibers, manufactured by Toyobo Co. Ltd. of Japan; UHMWPE (ultra heavy molecular weight poly ethylene) fibers such as SPECTRA® UHMWPE fibers, manufactured by Honeywell International of Morristown, N.J. and DYNEEMA® UHMWPE fibers, manufactured by DSM High Performance Fibers B.V. of the Netherlands; PIPD (poly{2,6-diimidazo[4,5-b:4′,5′-e]-pyridinylene-1,4(2,5-dihydroxy)phenylene}) fibers, such as M5® PIPD fibers, manufactured by Magellan Systems International, LLC of Bethesda, Md. Other non-limiting examples of suitable materials include VECTRAN® aromatic polyester fiber (Kuraray Co. Ltd. of Japan), TECHNORA® aramid fiber (Teijin Techno Products Limited, of Japan), and NEXTEL® ceramic fiber (3M Ceramic Fiber Products). All of the fibers listed above are characterized by high stiffness and high strength-to-weight ratios.
There still exists much opportunity in the current state of the art to enhance the ballistic resistance of fabric systems comprised of the aforementioned high performance yarns. The improved performance may be realized, for example, by creating lighter fabric systems by using less material and fewer number of plies, by reducing back face deformations, and by increasing the V50 velocity (velocity at which there is a 50% probability of penetration) and V0 velocity (highest velocity at which there is a 0% probability of penetration), as compared to equivalent systems comprised of the conventional arrangements addressed in the prior art.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONOne aspect of the invention comprises a woven ballistic resistant fabric armor system comprising a plurality of plies that together define a thickness, at least one ply comprising warp yarns and fill yarns having a yarn-yarn angle between them of less than 90°. Each ply has a warp and fill orientation relative to an axis along the thickness of the plies such that adjacent plies either have different yarn-yarn angles, different ply orientations, or a combination thereof. The minimum yarn-yarn angle is typically greater than the locking angle of the yarns. Each ply may have the same yarn-yarn angle or the plies may have different yarn-yarn angles, for example, wherein the yarn-yarn angle of each successive ply beneath a topmost ply is less than an adjacent ply above.
At least two plies, and in one embodiment, all plies, may be stitched together. The stitching pattern may comprise parallel unidirectional lines, or a square, rectangular, or diamond shape. A first plurality of plies, including a topmost ply and all plies above a mid-plane of the armor thickness, may be stitched together in a first stitching pattern, with remaining plies below stitched together in second stitching pattern that differs in shape or size.
In one embodiment, an upper plurality of plies, such as comprising no more than a quarter of the total thickness of the armor, may be separated from a lower plurality of plies by a filler material. The filler material may comprise a plurality of fabric ply pieces, each piece sized and positioned to fit completely within a cell periphery created by a stitching pattern, wherein at least adjacent plies directly above and directly below the filler material are stitched together using the stitching pattern.
All or less than all of the yarns in all of the plurality of plies may comprise a same single high strength and high modulus material. The materials of construction in the upper plurality of plies may comprise a first material characterized by greater absorption of energy during high energy impacts that cause failure by a shearing mechanism and the lower plurality of plies may comprise a second material characterized by greater absorption of energy during low energy impacts that cause yarn failure by a tensile elongation mechanism. The stiffness of the yarn materials used in the plies may change, such as by progressively increasing, through the armor thickness and/or the strain-to-failure may change, such as by progressively decreasing, through the armor thickness.
The armor may comprise a flexible, dry fabric armor system, or a flexible fabric armor system comprising one or more plies partially or fully impregnated with resin. The armor may comprise a body armor wearable by a user, or an armor for another use, such as but not limited to use in an engine casing, a lining for an airplane fuselage, or a spall liner for a vehicle.
The present invention relates to a flexible ballistic resistant fabric armor system that can be used for both human torso and extremity protection. It can also be used as a subsystem in other armor arrangements such as stiff armor that is comprised of fabrics with resin impregnation and composite inserts. Multiple plies of fabric may be stitched together. These multiple plies may also be oriented in different directions and/or may be comprised of different high performance fibers.
The present invention uses various material and/or architectural modifications to increase the performance of a fabric armor system over the prior art. Such architectural modifications include changing the angle between the warp and fill yarns in each plain weave ply to an angle less than the conventional 90°, and systematically varying the ply orientation of successive plies through the thickness. Such material modifications include using materials of different stiffness and strain-to-failure in each ply. The enhanced performance of such a fabric armor system may be realized through an increased V50 velocity, an increased V0 velocity, a reduced back face deformation, and a lighter fabric armor system compared to conventional arrangements in the prior art.
Although the invention is illustrated and described herein with reference to specific embodiments such as body armor for law enforcement and military personnel, the invention is not intended to be limited to the details shown. Rather, various modifications may be made in the details within the scope and range of equivalents of the claims and without departing from the invention. The invention may be modified to encompass any fabric-based, protective, energy-dissipating system and composite structures, including but not limited to, engine casings and airplane fuselages, spall liners in armored vehicles and infantry carriers, and any other casing that requires ballistic, shrapnel, or fragment containment. Thus, as used herein, the term “ballistic resistant” refers to resistance to penetration from any type of projectile, including but not limited to bullets, shrapnel, fragments, and the like.
Armor 100 is usually encased in some flexible outer cover that shields it from light and abrasion, as well as to provide a camouflage design to the armor. This outer cover, however, is not essential to the core working of the fabric armor 100.
To better understand the enhanced performance of fabric armor 100 over conventional arrangements in the prior art, the basics of the mechanics of energy dissipations and interactions in a fabric system are briefly discussed:
Upon impact, a longitudinal strain wave propagates through the yarns in a direction pointing outwards from the impact zone with a velocity approximately equal to the square root of the ratio of the longitudinal elastic modulus to the material density of the yarn. The yarn material within the front of this longitudinal strain wave is subjected to elongation and correspondingly develops an elastic strain energy. It is commonly assumed that most high strength and high stiffness yarns used in ballistic applications are elastic until failure. Thus a part of the kinetic energy of the projectile is converted into the internal energy of the fabric. Component (b) is the fabric kinetic energy and is created through momentum transfer between the impacting projectile and the fabric system.
Depending on the orientation of the plain weave plies in the fabric system, the locus of the fronts of the transverse displacement wave in all yarns creates a deformation that has a pyramidal shape that grows in time as it propagates outwards from the impact zone. The transverse wave propagates outwards with a velocity orders of magnitude lesser than the longitudinal strain wave velocity in a yarn.
Referring to
If any sides of the fabric are left free, the component of fabric momentum caused by the inward pulling of the fabric towards the impact zone will be higher than if the sides of the fabric were gripped. Component (c) is the frictional energy that is dissipated when two or more entities slide past one another. The amount of frictional energy dissipated is related to the product of the normal contact force and the coefficient of friction between the sliding surfaces. Component (c) is further divided into four sub components depending on entities that participate in the sliding interactions: (i) filament-filament interactions within a yarn, (ii) yarn-yarn interactions within a single fabric ply, (iii) ply-ply interactions within the fabric system, and (iv) projectile-fabric system interactions during penetration. These interactions however not only contribute to component (c) but also to components (a) and (b). In addition to these three main components, there are other modes of energy dissipation.
If
Because of the varying orientation of each ply, unlike in region 72 of
While region 72 in
In addition to the effect of orienting each sheared fabric ply in a differential manner, there is a significant effect of altering the yarn-yarn angle on fabric armor performance, as discussed earlier. The angle between the warp and fill yarns in a plain weave fabric is reduced from the conventional 90° such that θlock<θ<90°. Here, θlock refers to the locking angle which is the minimum angle permissible between warp and fill yarns, such that during a biaxial tensile test of a plain weave fabric, the fabric in-plane stiffness shows a sharp rise when the angle between the yarns reaches the locking angle. This is also caused by yarn jamming in a picture frame test where the fabric in-plane shear modulus shows a sharp rise at the locking angle.
Depending on the chosen yarn-yarn angle, even a single ply of sheared fabric under transverse impact may outperform an equivalent normal plain weave fabric that is gripped on two opposite sides or on all four corners, since in addition to usual modes of energy dissipation of a fabric as discussed earlier, the sheared fabric also utilizes the rotational interactions between the warp and fill yarns within a ply, termed as ‘yarn reorientation’. This accounts for an increased frictional energy dissipation due to yarn reorientation. Further, if the locking angle is reached before penetration, the sharp increase in fabric stiffness will lead to an increased fabric in-plane tension which provides the necessary retarding contact force against the projectile.
According to the Impulse-Momentum equation, the greater the contact force, the larger the deceleration of the projectile. Increasing the coefficient of friction between the warp and fill yarns through additives, surface treatments, or interfacial treatments known in the art may further enhance the rotational frictional energy dissipated, as well the sliding frictional energy dissipated by yarn pullout. Known treatments include but are not limited to polymetric film coatings including a polypyrole, as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,248,676, treatment with a pyrole compound and an aniline compound as described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,225,241, a combination of elastomer and plastic film coatings, as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,846,758, and corona or scouring treatments with or without fiber coatings, all of the foregoing patents incorporated by reference for their teachings with respect to increasing of frictional coefficients of ballistic fabric yarns. As mentioned above, because of the increased inter-ply sliding and deformation interactions in a sheared fabric multiple ply system, the impact on total frictional sliding energy of increasing the friction coefficient is greater for sheared fabrics than for normal fabrics. Also, for the same in-plane dimensions, a sheared fabric ply has a larger areal density (mass per unit fabric area) than a normal fabric ply, because of the decreased span or larger cover factor, which implies smaller gaps between the yarn cross over regions. This areal density increases with decreasing yarn-yarn angle θ. A higher areal density implies greater kinetic energy of the fabric system through momentum transfer, which further translates to enhanced performance. The smallest yarn-yarn angle permissible will be constrained by the drapability of the fabric armor, however, since it must remain flexible enough to conform to the shape of the human extremities.
Simulated Experimental ResultsThe improvements of the present invention over the conventional prior art are illustrated by specific embodiments of the invention as discussed herein. The components of a typical experimental fabric ballistic impact test are illustrated in
The advanced commercial dynamic finite element code LS-DYNA®, made by Livermore Software Technology Corp, of Livermore, Calif., was used to simulate this experimental ballistic impact event. The finite element analysis, in general, and this code, in particular, have been well-established for such purposes in the scientific community and is open literature. Using the simulation environment to highlight the superior performance of exemplary embodiments of the present invention was chosen to minimize human or operator interference that may introduce variability in the test set-up from one test to another, as well as to remove experimentally-induced uncertainties and errors into the test, that include but are not limited to: uneven fabric clamping pressures; non-alignment of the fabric within the grips; projectiles of varying shapes, masses and impact velocities; calibration errors in the recording instrumentation; damaged fabric samples; variation in impact location around the fabric dead center, et cetera. The simulation environment provides an unbiased, repeatable, and deterministic approach that also provides for the extraction of in-depth results and information not possible through experimental testing.
For example, the energy dissipated during the experimental ballistic impact of a fabric is often quantified using the simple equation:
where mp is the mass of the projectile assumed to remain constant, vi is the initial or impact velocity, vf is the final or residual velocity, and E is the energy dissipated by the fabric. Using only experimental instrumentation and analysis techniques, however, the quantity E cannot be easily partitioned into its various components, such as the fabric strain energy, fabric kinetic energy, and fabric frictional energy. These are the dominant components of energy dissipation, and an increase in any component can cause drastic improvements in ballistic performance. Such an aforementioned partition is possible, however, through the simulation environment. Components of the quantity E are very important in comparing the performance of fabric systems, in addition to other parameters, such as the V50 velocity and back face deformation.
For purposes of the simulation, a generic high strength plain weave fabric of in-plane dimensions 50.8 mm×101.6 mm, having an areal density of 47 g/m2 and a longitudinal elastic modulus of 62 GPa was chosen. The material properties were arbitrarily chosen and are not necessarily indicative of actual or desired material properties.
An event comprising a 5.334 mm diameter rigid spherical projectile of mass 0.63 gm at 106.3 m/s impacting at the center of the fabric was simulated. The fabric was modeled within the finite element code as a homogenous membrane using fully integrated shell elements with two through-thickness integration points. An orthotropic elastic material model was assigned to the shells. No failure criterion was incorporated, resulting in only non-penetrating impact scenarios. The two integration points of each shell represent the material directions, or more specifically, the warp and fill yarn directions. For a normal fabric, the two integration points were aligned along the warp and fill yarn directions by assigning angle values of 0° and 90°. For a sheared fabric, two integration points were assigned different angle values based on the specific examples used in this case study, such as ±15°, ±26.5°, ±35°, and so forth. The fabric boundary conditions were varied between gripping the two shorter sides and gripping all four sides. For multiple layers of fabric, the fabric was modeled as stacked identically in all layers (henceforth referred to as ‘Identical’) or systematically rotated in each layer through the thickness (henceforth referred to as ‘Rotated’). Thus, for two layers of fabric, the second layer was typically rotated by 45° or 90° in the counter-clockwise direction with respect to the first layer. The fabric velocity history, time at which the projectile is stopped, maximum fabric dynamic deflection or back face deformation, and fabric internal or strain energy history were recorded and used to compare the present invention against prior art.
Levels of fabric back face deformations are an important consideration in protective human torso applications, since large back face deformations can result in traumatic or fatal injuries classified as BABT or behind armor blunt trauma. Similarly, the V0 velocity is an important consideration, which is defined as the highest velocity at which there is a zero percent probability of projectile penetration. This quantity can indirectly be assessed by considering non-penetrating impact cases and measuring the time taken to arrest the projectile completely. Limitations of this particular implementation of the simulation approach include (1) the homogenizing assumption that precludes yarn-yarn frictional interactions and (2) inability to account for yarn through-thickness compression and yarn reorientation effects. Other advanced simulation techniques are available that capture more detailed levels of interactions and mechanisms. For the limited purpose of presenting selected improvements of the present invention over prior art, however, the presently incorporated simulation technique was deemed sufficient. The use of more advanced simulation techniques may report further net improvements in ballistic performance over the prior art.
Modeling Case 1: Single Layer Fabric Gripped on the Two Shorter SidesIn simulated tests modeling a single layer of fabric held on the two shorter sides, for a sheared fabric as depicted in
A second simulated experiment was modeled as two layers of fabric gripped on the two short sides, with one set of fabric layers sheared with identical ply orientation as depicted in
Another simulated experiment was run comparing sheared and normal fabric with rotated and with identical second ply layers, similar to the Modeling Case 2 with the same relationships between fabric plies as illustrated in
As shown in
While the improvements of the present invention were demonstrated using simulated experiments at a yarn-yarn angle of 15° for a generic fabric, with one to two layers, and with fixed-fixed or fixed-free boundary conditions, the final yarn-yarn angle that yields optimal performance over a normal fabric may vary depending on the type of fabric weave architecture and material properties of the yarns. The yarn-yarn angles and ply orientations chosen in these examples are in no way meant to limit the overall scope or applicability of the invention, and are not indicative of the magnitudes of yarn-yarn angles and ply orientations that may yield significant improvements over conventional arrangements in prior art. Rather a broad range of yarn-yarn angles below 90° and many different ply orientation patterns may lead to significant improvements over conventional arrangements. Finally, the relatively small in-plane dimensions and few number of fabric layers chosen for the simulations are merely for illustrative purposes and are in no way indicative of the actual overall size or shape of a ballistic fabric system. In fact, the significant improvements predicted for the present invention over small in-plane fabric dimensions and only a few number of fabric layers, is only expected to scale further upwards with the size of the fabric and number of layers in a typical commercial ballistic fabric system.
Other ModificationsIn addition to the architectural modifications discussed so far, several material modifications may be used in fabric armor 100 through varying the high performance material used in each sheared plain weave fabric ply to further enhance performance. During the ballistic impact of multiple plies of a fabric system, it is possible that the first few (impacted) or last few plies fail earlier than the remaining plies, decreasing the performance of the system. This is because once a ply fails, it no longer contributes in any significant way to the fabric system energy dissipation process, even if the plies are stitched together.
It is therefore more desirable for all plies to fail together, thereby maintaining structural integrity for as long as possible until failure and increasing the elastic strain energy and inertial effects of the fabric armor, since a greater mass of fabric plies are involved in resisting the impacting projectile. If the top few plies fail earlier than the remaining plies, by decreasing the stiffness of the plies, or by increasing the strain-to-failure of the plies, or a combination of both, the yarns in the top few plies may fail at a later time during the impact event, and closer to or the same time that the lower plies failed. If however the lower plies fail earlier, then a similar material modification may be made to them. The desired change in material properties may be accomplished by choosing different variants of materials but within the same class. For example, KEVLAR® aramid fibers have many variants such as KEVLAR® 49, KEVLAR® 129, and KEVLAR KM2® aramid fibers, each with distinctive material properties such as denier, stiffness, and strength. Or, completely different materials may be used altogether, such as a mixture of aramid and UHMWPE.
While the aforementioned technology improves the projectile resistance of any fabric consisting of any type of yarn material, embodiments of this invention may yield particularly desirable results using a yarn material that has a denier of at least 450, areal density of at least 150 g/m2, longitudinal elastic modulus of at least 50 GPa, and strain-to-failure of at least 2.2% and at most 4.0%. Such materials may be referred to as “high strength,” “high modulus,” or “high performance.” The invention is not limited, however, to any particular ranges of denier, areal density, elastic modulus, or strength. In order to prevent the top few plies from failing much earlier, materials that absorb more energy during high energy impacts that cause yarn failure by a shearing mechanism, such as ultra high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE), may be used in the upper few plies, while a material that absorbs more energy during low energy impacts that cause yarn failure by a tensile elongation mechanism, such as an aramid or PBO material, may be used in the remaining lower plies. Thus a fabric target 100 that is comprised of different high performance materials in different plies may have a superior ballistic resistance compared to fabric targets comprised of the same high performance material in all plies. Specifically, the warp yarn and fill yarn in a topmost ply may comprise a material having a lesser stiffness than the materials used in the lower plies, with the stiffness progressively increasing through the armor thickness. Similarly, the yarn in a topmost ply may have the highest strain-to-failure of all the plies, with the strain-to-failure progressively decreasing through the armor thickness. Likewise, the yarns may have progressively decreasing stiffness and/or progressively increasing strain-to-failure, or may change in a predetermined pattern across the thickness of the armor system.
If the mode of deformation and failure of the top few plies is forced from a shear mode into a tensile mode, however, the overall performance of the fabric target may be further increased. This may be accomplished by using a soft filler material within the top few plies of the fabric target. For example, the filler may be located between an upper plurality of plies and a lower plurality of plies, wherein the total thickness of the plies above the filler constitute less than a quarter of a total thickness of the armor. Referring to
As shown in
Although shown in
The yarn-yarn angle θ may also be varied between plies. It may be preferable to increase the yarn-yarn angle from the top ply to the bottom ply, or vice versa, or to vary the yarn-yarn angle in a predetermined pattern along the thickness of the system. It is also possible to combine plies of normal plain weave fabrics with plies of sheared plain weave fabrics in the fabric armor. In such a case it may be preferable to use the normal plain weave fabrics in the lower few plies of the fabric armor. In this disclosure, the mechanisms have been exemplified with respect to a plain weave fabric, however they are still valid for other architectures such as but not limited to sheared fabric, satin harness, twill weave, basket weave and the like. Thus, a suitable ballistic resistant armor of this invention may comprise a plurality of plies all comprising a plain weave architecture, which may be balanced or unbalanced, all of the plies may be a satin harness or some other architecture, or the plies may comprise a mixture of plain weave and other architectures.
While stitching is not necessary to the working of the fabric armor, it is preferable to hold the various fabric plies together. Furthermore, by varying the pattern of stitching, the performance may be enhanced. This includes unidirectional stitching, or using patterns of rectangular or diamond shape. All the layers may be stitched together, or only selective plies may be stitched together. In high velocity impacts where the top plies fail earlier, a smaller or tighter pattern of stitching may be used so as to couple the top few layers to the remaining plies below, so that even after the top few layers fail, they still contribute in some part to the overall energy dissipation process. However a bigger or looser pattern of stitching may be used for the lower plies.
Finally, it should be understood that a number of architectural and material variations are discussed herein, each of which may comprise an improvement over the prior art standing alone, and each of which may be used in some combination with one another. For example, improvements may be effected simply by using a yarn-yarn-angle of less than 90°, by using different yarn-yarn angles in different plies, by varying the materials of construction from ply to ply as described herein, by using fillers and/or filler pieces as discussed herein, by varying the stitching as discussed herein, and so on. Accordingly, while combinations of the various aspects discussed herein may provide better performance than use of any one alone, the invention is not limited to any particular combination of features.
This presented invention disclosure and exemplary embodiments are meant for the purpose of illustration and description. The invention is not intended to be limited to the details shown. Rather, various modifications in the illustrative and descriptive details, and embodiments may be made by someone skilled in the art. These modifications may be made in the details within the scope and range of equivalents of the claims and without departing from the invention.
Claims
1. A woven ballistic resistant fabric armor system comprising a plurality of plies together defining a thickness, at least one ply comprising warp yarns and fill yarns having a yarn-yarn angle between them of less than 90°, each ply having a ply orientation of the warp and fill yarns relative to an axis along the thickness, wherein adjacent plies have (a) a different yarn-yarn angle, (b) a different ply orientation, or (c) a combination of (a) and (b).
2. The woven ballistic resistant fabric armor system of claim 1, wherein the minimum yarn-yarn angle is greater than a locking angle of the yarns.
3. The woven ballistic resistant fabric armor system of claim 1, wherein:
- each ply has (a) an angle bisector that bisects the yarn-yarn angle for that ply and (b) a reference vector that is parallel to corresponding reference vectors for each other ply, and
- successive fabric plies are rotated relative to one another in a rotation pattern in which the angle bisectors for the first, second, third and fourth plies are aligned relative to the reference vectors at angles of 0°, 90°, +45°, and −45° respectively, and the angle bisectors of any additional successive plies repeat the same rotation pattern as the first through fourth plies.
4. The woven ballistic resistant fabric armor system of claim 1, wherein
- each ply has (a) an angle bisector that bisects the yarn-yarn angle for that ply and (b) a reference vector that is parallel to corresponding reference vectors for each other ply, and
- successive fabric plies are rotated relative to one another in a rotation pattern in which the angle bisectors for the first and second plies are aligned relative to the reference vectors at angles of 0° and 90°, respectively, and the angle bisectors of any additional successive plies repeat the same rotation pattern as the first and second plies.
5. The woven ballistic resistant fabric armor system of claim 1, wherein:
- each ply has (a) an angle bisector that bisects the yarn-yarn angle for that ply and (b) a reference vector that is parallel to corresponding reference vectors for each other ply, and
- successive fabric plies are rotated relative to one another in a rotation pattern in which the angle bisectors for the first through eighth plies are aligned relative to the reference vectors at angles of 0°, 90°, +45°, −45°, +22.5°, −22.5°, +67.5°, and −67.5°, respectively, and the angle bisectors of any additional successive plies repeat the same rotation pattern as the first through eighth plies.
6. the Woven Ballistic Resistant Fabric Armor System of Claim 1, Wherein none of the plurality of fabric plies have the same yarn-yarn angle.
7. The woven ballistic resistant fabric armor system of claim 1, wherein all of the plurality of fabric plies have the same yarn-yarn angle.
8. The woven ballistic resistant fabric armor system of claim 1, comprising a topmost ply relative to a potential projectile impact, wherein the respective yarn-yarn angles of plies beneath the topmost ply are progressively less than an adjacent ply above, progressively greater than an adjacent ply above, or different from one another in a predetermined pattern.
9. The woven ballistic resistant fabric armor system of claim 1, wherein at least two plies are stitched together.
10. The woven ballistic resistant fabric armor system of claim 1, wherein all plies are stitched to at least one other ply.
11. The woven ballistic resistant fabric armor system of claim 9, wherein the at least two plies are stitched together in a stitching pattern comprising parallel unidirectional lines, or a square, rectangular, or diamond shape.
12. The woven ballistic resistant fabric armor system of claim 10 having an armor thickness, comprising:
- a first plurality of plies stitched together in a first stitching pattern, the first plurality including a topmost ply relative to a potential projectile impact, an intermediate ply above a mid-plane of the armor thickness, and all plies between the topmost ply and the intermediate ply, and
- remaining plies below the intermediate ply stitched together in second stitching pattern, wherein the second stitching pattern differs from the first stitching pattern with respect to shape or size of the stitching pattern.
13. The woven ballistic resistant fabric armor system of claim 1, comprising a topmost plurality of plies relative to a potential projectile impact separated from a bottommost plurality of plies by a filler material, wherein the topmost plurality comprises fewer plies than the bottommost plurality and the topmost plurality has a thickness that is not more than a quarter of a total thickness of the armor.
14. The woven ballistic resistant fabric armor system of claim 13, wherein the filler material has a thickness in a range of two to six times a single ply thickness, has an areal density less than an equivalent areal density of a single fabric ply, and has a stiffness and a bulk modulus less than a single fabric ply.
15. The woven ballistic resistant fabric armor system of claim 13, wherein the filler material is stitched to plies above, plies below, or a combination thereof.
16. The woven ballistic resistant fabric armor system of claim 13, wherein the filler material comprises a plurality of fabric ply pieces, each piece sized and positioned to fit completely within a cell periphery created by a stitching pattern, wherein at least adjacent plies directly above and directly below the filler material are stitched together using the stitching pattern.
17. The woven ballistic resistant fabric armor system of claim 1, wherein all warp yarns and fill yarns in all of the plurality of plies comprise a same single high strength and high modulus material.
18. The woven ballistic resistant fabric armor system of claim 1, wherein less than all warp yarns and fill yarns in all of the plurality of plies comprise a same single high strength and high modulus material.
19. The woven ballistic resistant fabric armor system of claim 18, wherein the warp yarn and fill yarn in an upper plurality of plies relative to a potential impact comprise a first material and the warp yarns and fill yarns in a lower plurality of plies comprise a second material, the first material relative to the second material characterized by greater absorption of energy during high energy impacts that cause failure by a shearing mechanism, the second material relative to the first material characterized by greater absorption of energy during low energy impacts that cause yarn failure by a tensile elongation mechanism.
20. The woven ballistic resistant fabric armor system of claim 1 having an armor thickness, wherein the warp yarns and fill yarns in a topmost ply relative to a potential impact have a first stiffness, and lower plies beneath the topmost ply each comprise warp yarns and fill yarns having a corresponding stiffness, wherein the corresponding stiffness progressively increases through the armor thickness, progressively decreases through the armor thickness, or varies throughout the armor thickness in a predetermined pattern.
21. The woven ballistic resistant fabric armor system of claim 1 having an armor thickness, wherein the warp yarns and fill yarns in a topmost ply relative to a potential impact have a first strain-to-failure, and lower plies beneath the topmost ply each comprise warp yarns and fill yarns having a corresponding strain-to-failure, wherein the corresponding strain-to-failure progressively increases through the armor thickness, decreases through the armor thickness, or varies throughout the armor thickness in a predetermined pattern.
22. The ballistic resistant armor of claim 1, wherein the warp yarn and fill yarn comprise one or more surface treatments, additives or interfacial treatments that increase a coefficient of friction between the warp and fill yarns relative to yarns without such treatments or additives.
23. The ballistic resistant armor of claim 1, wherein the warp yarn and fill yarn comprise a material having a denier of at least 450, an areal density of at least 150 g/m2, a longitudinal elastic modulus of at least 50 GPa, and a strain-to-failure of at least 2.2% and at most 4.0%.
24. The ballistic resistant armor of claim 1 comprising a flexible, dry fabric armor system.
25. The ballistic resistant armor of claim 1, comprising a flexible fabric armor system comprising one or more plies partially impregnated with resin.
26. The ballistic resistant armor of claim 1, comprising a rigid fabric armor system comprising one of more plies fully impregnated with resin.
27. The ballistic resistant armor of claim 1, wherein the armor comprises body armor wearable by a user.
28. The ballistic resistant armor of claim 1, wherein the armor comprises an engine casing.
29. The ballistic resistant armor of claim 1, wherein the armor comprises a lining for an airplane fuselage.
30. The ballistic resistant armor of claim 1, wherein the armor comprises a spall liner for a vehicle.
31. The ballistic resistant armor of claim 1, wherein each of the plies comprises a plain weave architecture.
Type: Application
Filed: Oct 15, 2009
Publication Date: Jun 24, 2010
Applicant: University of Delaware (Newark, DE)
Inventors: Gaurav Nilakantan (Newark, DE), John W. Gillespie, JR. (Hockessin, DE), Michael Keefe (Bear, DE)
Application Number: 12/579,945
International Classification: F41H 5/00 (20060101);