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Finite Element Modeling of a 5.56 mm Brass Cartridge Joseph South & Larry Burton U.S. Army Research...

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Finite Element Modeling of a 5.56 mm Brass Cartridge Joseph South & Larry Burton U.S. Army Research Laboratory Composites and Lightweight Structures Branch
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Page 1: Finite Element Modeling of a 5.56 mm Brass Cartridge Joseph South & Larry Burton U.S. Army Research Laboratory Composites and Lightweight Structures Branch.

Finite Element Modeling of a 5.56 mm Brass Cartridge

Joseph South & Larry Burton

U.S. Army Research LaboratoryComposites and Lightweight Structures Branch

Page 2: Finite Element Modeling of a 5.56 mm Brass Cartridge Joseph South & Larry Burton U.S. Army Research Laboratory Composites and Lightweight Structures Branch.

Outline

• Overview

• Cartridge Challenges

• Brass Cartridge FEA Modeling– Model Generation– Mechanical Results

• Polymer Cartridge FEA Modeling

Page 3: Finite Element Modeling of a 5.56 mm Brass Cartridge Joseph South & Larry Burton U.S. Army Research Laboratory Composites and Lightweight Structures Branch.

Overview

• Goal– Development of a baseline thermo-mechanical model for a 5.56 mm

cartridge inside a M16A2 barrel.

• Approach– Creation and validation of a model for the M855 brass cartridge.

– Utilize FEA to assess the feasibility of lightweight polymers in cartridge case applications.

• Technical Barriers– Material functionality is required over the full spectrum of

environmental conditions.

– Strength required to meet all operational functions• propellant gas pressure, primer strike, feed, extraction

Page 4: Finite Element Modeling of a 5.56 mm Brass Cartridge Joseph South & Larry Burton U.S. Army Research Laboratory Composites and Lightweight Structures Branch.

Polymer Cartridge Payoff• Polymers have the potential

– to reduce the manufacturing cost• By reducing the number of steps through injection molding

– reduce logistical load

– improve accuracy• Injection mold the bullet in place• Maintain the centerline alignment

Current Basic Issue7 Magazines M855

10 Magazines withPolymer Case Cartridges

Equivalent Weight

Page 5: Finite Element Modeling of a 5.56 mm Brass Cartridge Joseph South & Larry Burton U.S. Army Research Laboratory Composites and Lightweight Structures Branch.

Lightweight Cartridge Challenge

• Brass– E ~ 16 Msi

– Tm - 1700°F

– Moisture insensitive

• Polymer– E ~ 0.2 - 1.3 Msi

– Tg - 320°F

– Hygroscopic

Page 6: Finite Element Modeling of a 5.56 mm Brass Cartridge Joseph South & Larry Burton U.S. Army Research Laboratory Composites and Lightweight Structures Branch.

Current brass systems require numerous manufacturing steps to produce the final microstructure and hardness gradient

80

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0 2 4 6 8

Location on Cartridge Case

Vic

kers

Hard

ness

2.5

kg L

oad [H

V]

Max Hardness Min Hardness

Brass Cartridge Characteristics

Hardness and microstructure gradient required to accurately model M855 response

Page 7: Finite Element Modeling of a 5.56 mm Brass Cartridge Joseph South & Larry Burton U.S. Army Research Laboratory Composites and Lightweight Structures Branch.

0

10000

20000

30000

40000

50000

60000

0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000 3500 4000

• 2D Static Model– Models a 5.56mm brass cartridge

in a M16A2 barrel with barrel extension.

– Incorporates the effect of the hardness gradient along the cartridge length.

– Material models include plasticity.– Primer is assumed have the

same structural characteristics as the cartridge.

– Contact pair between the cartridge and chamber wall and the cartridge and primer.

– Pressure gradient is applied to the inside of the cartridge.

– Thermo-mechanical model.

M855 Pressure Profile

0

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0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7

True Strain

True

Str

ess

[ksi

]

0

20000

40000

60000

80000

100000

120000

0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0

140 HV 180 HV 200 HV 200 HV

Brass Cartridge Model

Page 8: Finite Element Modeling of a 5.56 mm Brass Cartridge Joseph South & Larry Burton U.S. Army Research Laboratory Composites and Lightweight Structures Branch.

Brass Cartridge Modeling

Page 9: Finite Element Modeling of a 5.56 mm Brass Cartridge Joseph South & Larry Burton U.S. Army Research Laboratory Composites and Lightweight Structures Branch.

Brass Cartridge Model

• Applied Boundary Conditions– Axisymmetric along y axis– Symmetric BC on primer wall

along the axis.– Zero displacement BC in all

directions applied to the head of the cartridge.

• Assumes continuous intimate contact between the bolt and the cartridge.

• Does not account for rearward motion during firing.

– Zero displacement BC in all directions applied to the barrel extension.

– Total of 31,000 elements.

Page 10: Finite Element Modeling of a 5.56 mm Brass Cartridge Joseph South & Larry Burton U.S. Army Research Laboratory Composites and Lightweight Structures Branch.

Thermal FEA Modeling• 2D Axisymmetric Sequential Model• Meshed with 8 node thermal elements

– ID contains surface effect element– 6000 elements

• Calculated from interior ballistics• Thermal loads are applied in a tabular

format to the ID

15

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55

85

135

195

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450000

Axial Location [in]

Page 11: Finite Element Modeling of a 5.56 mm Brass Cartridge Joseph South & Larry Burton U.S. Army Research Laboratory Composites and Lightweight Structures Branch.

Brass Cartridge FEA Results

Failure Criteriault tensile = 120 ksiult comp = 100 ksiult = 0.45

-60

-40

-20

0

20

40

60

0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 1.2 1.4 1.6

Length Along Cartridge [in]

Tru

e S

tres

s [k

si]

Radial Stress Axial Stress Hoop Stress Principle Stress

Page 12: Finite Element Modeling of a 5.56 mm Brass Cartridge Joseph South & Larry Burton U.S. Army Research Laboratory Composites and Lightweight Structures Branch.

Brass Cartridge FEA Results

-0.0005

0.0000

0.0005

0.0010

0.0015

0.0020

0.0025

0.0030

0.0035

0.00 0.25 0.50 0.75 1.00 1.25 1.50 1.75 2.00

Length Along Cartridge [in]

Ra

dia

l P

lastic D

isp

lace

me

nt

[in

]

Measured Cartridge DeformationNominal Bore DimensionBore With Maximum Tolerance

Page 13: Finite Element Modeling of a 5.56 mm Brass Cartridge Joseph South & Larry Burton U.S. Army Research Laboratory Composites and Lightweight Structures Branch.

Brass Model Summary

• Goal has been to benchmark the M855 brass cartridge with a FEA model.

• The current model incorporates the strength changes in the cartridge due to the variations in the hardness and microstructure.

• The model yields a stress state within the brass that demonstrates 2.0 ultimate factor of safety.

• Measurements from expended cartridges show good correlation with the predicted plastic deformation.

Page 14: Finite Element Modeling of a 5.56 mm Brass Cartridge Joseph South & Larry Burton U.S. Army Research Laboratory Composites and Lightweight Structures Branch.

Polymer Cartridge Model

• 2D Axisymmetric Model– Cartridge is entirely polymer– Nylon 612– Internal pressure is loaded in

smaller increments

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5

True Strain

Tru

e S

tre

ss [

ksi]

Page 15: Finite Element Modeling of a 5.56 mm Brass Cartridge Joseph South & Larry Burton U.S. Army Research Laboratory Composites and Lightweight Structures Branch.

-7

-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

0 0.5 1 1.5 2

Location along Cartridge [in]

True

Str

ess

[ksi

]

Radial Stress Axial Stress Hoop Stress Principle Stress

Polymer Cartridge FEA Results

Failure CriteriaNylon 612

ult tensile = 7 ksiult tensile = 0.4

Subjected to an Internal Pressure of 5 ksi

Page 16: Finite Element Modeling of a 5.56 mm Brass Cartridge Joseph South & Larry Burton U.S. Army Research Laboratory Composites and Lightweight Structures Branch.

Polymer Cartridge FEA ResultsDisplacement Vector Plot

Page 17: Finite Element Modeling of a 5.56 mm Brass Cartridge Joseph South & Larry Burton U.S. Army Research Laboratory Composites and Lightweight Structures Branch.

Polymer Model Summary

• The polymer cartridge model is currently a work in progress.• Due to the mechanical properties of the polymer, modifications

to the case design will be required.• Investigations continue into optimizing the model including

– Parametric assessment of increased wall thickness on survivability of polymer cartridge

– The effect of the cartridge head design on the survivability of the polymer cartridge.

– Alternate materials• Different polymer systems or filled composite systems

Page 18: Finite Element Modeling of a 5.56 mm Brass Cartridge Joseph South & Larry Burton U.S. Army Research Laboratory Composites and Lightweight Structures Branch.

Conclusions &Future Direction

• The FEA modeling of the brass M855 cartridge provides a solid foundation to evaluate alternative cartridge materials.

• Future efforts will focus on– Applying the thermal capability to determine in-bore heating

profile.• Allows for investigation of cook-off and thermal softening.

– Use existing model to examine stress state due to• Primer strike, extraction and feed.


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