Underwater Explosion Bubble Jetting Effects on Infrastructure

Abstract

Underwater explosions present a significant risk to structures because they were not designed for these types of loads and because water transmits explosive energy much more efficiently than air. The US Navy demonstrated that the effect of bubble jetting from an underwater explosion can result in significant late-time loading compared to the initial shock loading. However, neither the effects of bubble jetting on structures, where the explosion is likely to be lateral to the target rather than beneath it, nor the loading conditions required to produce bubble jetting effects on such structures (charge weight, submerged depth, and standoff distance to structure) are well understood. This investigation improves characterizations of bubble formation, collapse, and jetting near lateral targets. The research includes very small-scale tests to observe bubble jetting, slightly larger underwater blast experiments to determine bubble jetting loads on vertical structures, and larger-scale experiments to measure bubble jetting effects on the structural deformation to structures.

Open PDF

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Mar 31, 2011
Accession Number
ADA545705

Entities

People

  • Greg M Harris
  • James L. O'daniel
  • John Fortune
  • Roger Ilamni
  • georges chahine

Organizations

  • United States Army Corps of Engineers

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Energy and Power Technologies
  • Ground and Sea Platforms
  • Weapons Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Bubbles
  • Collapse
  • Department Of Homeland Security
  • Engineering
  • Explosion Bubbles
  • Explosion Effects
  • Explosions
  • Explosives
  • Flow
  • Fluid Flow
  • Fluids
  • Froude Number
  • Infrastructure
  • Reinforced Concrete
  • Spark Gaps
  • Structural Response
  • Underwater Explosions

Readers

  • Explosive Engineering.
  • Ocean-Atmosphere Mesoscale Modeling, Data Assimilation, and Flux Boundary Layers