1. Introduction
Pyrotechnic devices, which contain separate energy sources such as explosives, have been used commonly in the aerospace industry for quite a long time. They have been utilized substantially on aerospace vehicles to carry out a great number of work functions, such as cutting, separation, pressurization, valving, electrical switching, personnel ejection as well as emergency and lifesaving applications. The usage of pyrotechnics is advantageous compared to the other release devices based on non-explosive release actuators due to the low volume–weight relationship, high reliability, instantaneous operation with simultaneity, long-term storage capability and low cost. For detailed overviews on such devices, one can refer to earlier NASA reports (see, e.g., [
1,
2]).
Although pyrotechnic devices have various advantages, the induced pyroshocks might result in catastrophic failure of the nearby optical and electrical components, which are sensitive to high-frequency energy. This is a crucial concern and it might eventually result in the failure of the flight. According to the report of Moening on the cause of failure in space programs between 1960 and 1982, of the 85 observed failures, 84% were directly or potentially related to pyroshock-induced failures [
3]. Pyroshock is defined as the transient response of the structures, components and systems due to the loading induced by the pyrotechnic devices attached to the structures [
4]. In general, pyroshock moves in terms of linear elastic waves to the adjacent structures without plastic deformation, except when in the vicinity of the pyrotechnic devices.
Due to their high potential to cause fatal problems, pyroshocks have been studied in the literature by many researchers. For the detailed analysis of the generation and propagation of shock waves, both experimental and numerical analyses have been conducted in the literature (see [
5] for a review). The studies have mostly focused on experimental approaches where the pyroshock is simulated on test structures and the propagated pyroshock is measured. Among these studies, the use of pyrotechnic devices is quite expensive and involves a high safety risk (see, e.g., [
6,
7,
8]). Therefore, different pyroshock simulators involving mechanical excitations have been proposed as well. However, in these setups, it is not easy to arrange the frequency and magnitude of the pyroshock excitation. For near-field pyroshock analysis, the explosive excitations are advised where high acceleration and high frequency can be obtained to verify structural integrity issues (see, e.g., [
4,
5,
9]). On the other hand, for the simulation of the mid- and far-field environments, mechanical excitations can be used through metal-to-metal impact, pneumatic impact or an electrodynamic shaker (see, e.g., [
4,
5,
7,
10,
11]). While electrodynamic shakers are limited to far-field pyroshock environments, metal-to-metal impact and pneumatic impact systems can simulate mid-field effects. They mostly consist of resonant structures such as a resonant beam or plate and they are utilized to test sub-systems or components. Some portable devices are studied in the literature as well to perform system-level tests, such as the work of Hwang et al. [
12]. Although it has not been widely employed in pyroshock analysis yet, another potential excitation method would be laser one, where a laser pulse would produce transient localized heating, which would lead to the development of hermoso-elastic stresses and strains acting as a source of shock waves [
5,
13].
It is not trivial to mimic the real transient acceleration field of pyroshock loadings with an experimental setup as they are highly chaotic and oscillatory and often impossible to replicate with a test bench. In order to overcome this problem, the effect of the pyroshock environment is not considered in the time domain but rather in the frequency domain. Therefore, both the shock history that a space instrument needs to withstand and the shock history that is applied to the instrument on a test setup mimicking the shock environment are described in the form of Shock Response Spectrum (SRS) curves. These curves are composed of the peak acceleration response of the real system as if it is a single degree of freedom (SDOF) setup that has a resonant frequency all over the frequency bands that are to be considered. Using SRS curves provides a convenient method to compare the severity levels of different shock loadings, and it is preferred in a number of different works in the literature (see, e.g., [
6,
7,
8,
9,
10,
11,
12,
13,
14,
15,
16,
17,
18]).
Metal-to-metal impact or pyrotechnic types of pyroshock simulators are not always capable of simulating the intended SRS curve precisely. These types of pyroshock simulators are without control loops, and mostly it is a trial-and-error process to simulate the correct level of shock (see, e.g., [
15,
16,
19]). Over-testing may happen, and acceleration levels may be much lower than necessary qualification levels. Discrepancies can occur in the total level of accelerations or local differences in different frequency bands, which cause qualification tests not to be performed properly.
In addition to experimental studies, numerical analysis techniques have also been employed to either test the instrument numerically for the desired shock levels or to investigate the necessary input parameters to perform an experiment with the correct shock levels. In this regard, experimental approaches can be replaced with numerical tools, which would reduce the time and the cost of the study. The most widely used numerical approach is the finite element method (see, e.g., [
6,
9,
15,
16,
20]). Among the studies based on FEM analysis, the study of García-Pérez et al. offers an overview of shock analysis methods based on implicit FEM [
18]. The authors mention that the FE method can be adequate to analyze small structures such as space instruments subjected not to near- or mid- but a far-field shock load, because its response is mainly dominated by the modal behavior. Other main approaches in the literature are the statistical energy analysis (SEA) method (see, e.g., [
21,
22]), and the hydrocode modeling of the system (see, e.g., [
8,
10,
13,
23]). Hydrocodes can predict the behavior in the near-, mid- and far-field through time domain analysis; however, they are considered not to be satisfying in terms of accuracy and require high computation times. Additionally, for a better prediction through numerical methods, hybrid approaches could be used, as shown in the work of Zhao et al. [
24].
In the current work, experimental and numerical pyroshock test results of a metal-to-metal impact system that can mimic far-field and mid-field pyroshock applications are presented with a focus on a correlation process of the experimental results with explicit FE simulations. Several tests are performed with a pneumatically excited ringing plate-type test system, where the effects of different configurations, such as speed of projectile and measurement location, are considered as well. In the experiments, the speed of projectile in the pneumatic excitation system as well as the acceleration from different locations are measured. The former is used as an input for the numerical simulations, while the latter is converted into SRS curves and compared with the results of FE simulations. The correlation process and the influence of different parameters in simulations are discussed in detail, as well as the performance of the explicit FE method in predicting SRS curves within different frequency ranges and acceleration levels, which is missing in the open literature. Although FE simulations are considered to have low accuracy for pyroshock problems (see, e.g., [
5]), it is shown in the current study that their performance could be substantially increased after the careful analysis of each model parameter. Furthermore, a pyroshock test with a dummy instrument mounted on the system is considered as a case study, and the performance of the FE simulations is evaluated in detail. Overall, the paper presents a unique study combining both experiments and explicit FE simulations for predicting the influence of pyroshocks.
The paper is organized as follows. The experimental setup and the performed measurements are presented in
Section 2. Then, in
Section 3, the FE models, the influence of different damping and non-linear contact parameters as well as the acceleration and the SRS results are presented. Moreover, the comparison of numerical and experimental studies, the differences in SRS results and the performance of the explicit FE method are discussed. A case study for a pyroshock test with a dummy instrument is presented in
Section 4, and the conclusions are presented in
Section 5.
3. Explicit Finite Element Simulations
As a numerical analysis tool, an explicit finite element solver, LSTC LS-DYNA, is preferred here. Explicit solvers are superior to implicit ones if highly non-linear loadings and complex non-linear contacts are present in the model, as in the case of the pyroshock test system (see, e.g., [
25]). However, the results of the explicit finite element analyses should be evaluated carefully since they are conditionally stable and converge if the respective CFL condition is satisfied. Moreover, they present a result indicating whether it is reasonable or not, contrary to implicit non-linear solutions. Therefore, the results should be correlated with the experiments before they are taken into consideration, as done in the current work.
The finite element model of the experimental system includes the resonant plate, the projectile and the measurement adaptor plate used to place the accelerometer, as shown in
Figure 5. The model mainly consists of reduced integration 2D shell and 3D brick elements. M8 bolts, which connect the measurement plate to the resonant plate, are modeled with the CNRB (Rigid Connection)—Beam Element—CNRB technique. The pneumatic gun and other system elements are not modeled at all for the sake of simplicity. Thus, the projectile is modeled at the very moment of collision. An initial velocity is imposed to the projectile with the *INITIAL VELOCITY GENERATION card of LS-DYNA, according to the values measured from the first set of experiments that are presented in
Section 2.
The corner spring that supports the resonant plate is not included in the FE model and no constraint is imposed on the connection points due to the fact that, in the real system, the resonant plate is loosely connected to the supporting bolt–spring system for in-plane directions. It is supported by the springs in the vertical direction but this effect is not modeled either, since it is concluded that they are not relevant to the acceleration results of the points of interest.
The mass of the accelerometer and its stiffness contribution to the system are negligible compared to the other elements; therefore, it is not modeled physically. However, a rigid element is added to the hole, which is screwed in the experiments, and the acceleration data are extracted from the midpoint of this rigid connection element. In this way, it is possible to average the acceleration of several nodes on the hole surface and to prevent a local unphysical acceleration peak that might arise due to the consideration of only a single node.
Element size differs throughout the model, from 15 mm for the projectile to 10 mm for the resonant plate and 5 mm for the measurement plate. For the parts where the wave propagation is critical, namely the resonant plate and the measurement plate, the mesh is fine enough to have at least 10 elements per wave length for the maximum frequency under consideration, as recommended in the literature (see, e.g., [
26]). All materials are modeled as linear elastic since no plastic deformation is expected to occur in the simulations presented in the paper, which is valid for the performed experiments as well.
3.1. Parameter Sensitivity Simulations
The ringing plate-type pyroshock test systems are well studied in the literature, both experimentally and numerically; thus, the effects of the test system performance parameters such as projectile weight, resonant plate size and thickness, impact velocity, etc., are well known. However, the specifications that have importance for a successful explicit simulation, such as contact and damping parameters, are not well studied and their practical effects in a pyroshock FE simulation–experiment correlation process are not clearly known. Therefore, it is necessary to conduct sensitivity simulations and evaluate the influence of these parameters on the SRS curves prior to the correlation process.
Firstly, the damping parameters are studied thoroughly since they seem to be critical so as not to overestimate the amplitudes in an SRS curve. Although there are different damping alternatives that a user can activate, originally, LS-DYNA solves an undamped dynamic transient system. One of these options is the classical Rayleigh damping, which is based on the stiffness and the mass of the system. It uses a system damping matrix C defined as:
where µ is the mass proportional Rayleigh damping coefficient, M is the system structural mass matrix, λ is the stiffness proportional Rayleigh damping coefficient, K is the system structural stiffness matrix.
Rayleigh damping is utilized with the *DAMPING STIFFNESS and *DAMPING GLOBAL card sets in LS-DYNA. Two sets of analyses are performed with different mass and stiffness matrix ratios while keeping all other parameters constant in order to isolate the effect of the specific damping parameters. The results are evaluated and compared in the form of SRS curves extracted from location 1.
Different values of mass proportional damping are simulated and compared in
Figure 6. It is obvious that mass damping decreases the acceleration levels throughout the whole frequency region, and it softens the peaks in the SRS curve, caused by the natural frequencies of the system. It also causes a shift in the frequency of several peak accelerations, but this effect is significant only for high damping levels, as it is only seen in the µ = 150 damping level.
Various values of stiffness proportional damping are utilized within another simulation set. Contrary to mass proportional damping, the effect of stiffness damping depends on the frequency level and it mostly affects the relatively higher-frequency domains, as shown in
Figure 7. Up to the knee frequency, which is roughly 1 kHz for this test setup, there is minimal influence on the SRS curves. Only the amplitudes on some of the troughs decrease in this frequency range. However, it has a gradual effect after the knee frequency in the form of decreasing the amplitude and smoothing over the peaks. At the high damping levels, it even causes the data to plateau and all its characteristics are lost from the value of λ = 0.25 at frequencies higher than 7.5 kHz.
In the FE computations of pyroshock systems, the load transfer issue requires special attention, i.e., transferring the load between the plates only via fasteners does not reflect the reality. It is vital to ensure surface-to-surface contact for all touching surfaces. It is observed in the experimental analysis that the different assembly configurations, such as assembling the measurement plate with three bolts instead of four or assembling it by placing additional bushes to prevent the contact between the plates, result in different SRS curves. For the simulation model presented in this section, there are two interfaces, i.e., the ones between the projectile and the resonant plate and between the resonant plate and the measurement plate. A penalty-based contact algorithm, the *CONTACT AUTOMATIC SURFACE TO SURFACE card, is utilized for both contact regions. It is based on a logic where springs are placed between the penetrating node and the penetrated surface so that the spring creates a force that pushes the node out of the penetrated surface. Since the stiffness of the spring directly affects the amplitude and the frequency content of the transmitted force from one surface to the other, it is critical to have the correct stiffness values for them. Different contact stiffness values are studied through SFS and SFM parameters, which directly scale the default contact stiffness calculated by LS-DYNA.
Simulations for the contact stiffness scale factor of 5, 50, 0.2 and 0.02 are performed and compared with the default value, which is the no scaling case in
Figure 8. The parameters are changed for both contact interfaces equally.
The contact stiffness changes the resulting SRS curve dramatically, as presented in
Figure 8. At the low-frequency range, between 100 and 250 Hz, the change has a negligible effect, while, for the higher values, the overall amplitude increases with the increasing contact stiffness. The effect is more dramatic for the high-frequency region. However, the contact stiffness and the amplitude are not directly proportional and the dependence is quite complicated. It is different for every frequency band and every scaling level. For instance, multiplying with 0.20 still maintains the general trend of default stiffness with lower amplitude, but multiplying with 0.02 creates an increasing trend between 7 and 10 kHz, even though overall amplitudes are much lower than the rest. The outcome of the sensitivity simulations and the values of the discussed numerical parameters and their effects are taken into consideration for the explicit FE simulations of the pyroshock experiments, which are presented in the next sub-section.
3.2. FE Simulation of Pyroshock Experiments
Several explicit FE simulations are performed for each test scenario presented previously in
Section 2.2 to obtain a numerical framework representing the real test case with acceptable errors. As a starting point, the simulations for all six scenarios are performed with Parameter Set 01, which contains the default contact parameters and no damping at all. These simulations are labelled as PS01 and the results are presented in
Figure 9 for different scenarios. A short evaluation reveals that the results show fair similarity with the experiments. However, for the lower frequency, even though the peaks coming from the natural frequencies of the resonant and the measurement plate seem to be captured, the amplitudes at these points are slightly different due to the damping existing in the real test system. For the high-frequency regime, the amplitudes are different for not only the peak points but also in the overall amplitude of the SRS curve. Moreover, while the trends of the SRS curves in the simulations are decreasing, the ones in the experiments are not. Considering the fact that there is no damping existing in the FE models with PS01, it is concluded that the two contact interfaces numerically damp the high-frequency content of the transmitted force. As mentioned in
Section 3, a penalty base contact algorithm has no physical background for the force transmission; it creates fictional springs to represent the applied force of the touching surface.
Since the main purpose of this study is to show and to evaluate the modeling potential of explicit FE simulations for a ringing plate pyroshock test system, the optimal parameter sets for the damping and contact algorithm are obtained through a parameter identification procedure, and the related results are labeled as PS02 and presented in
Table 3. The simulations for all six scenarios are performed again and the comparison is presented in
Figure 9.
The simulations with the PS02 parameter set show significant differences from the ones performed with default parameters. First of all, the peaks that indicate the natural frequencies of the system up to 900 Hz decrease and become closer or even identical to the experimental results. For location 1 (Scenario 01-02-03), there are two significant peaks, which are around 330 Hz and 650 Hz. The new set of simulations captures the peak values exactly for the latter, and although there still is a gap between the simulation and the experiment, it reveals a closer value for the former. As an unexpected outcome, it decreases the amplitude of the SRS curve between 300 and 500 Hz and it is debatable that the new damping parameters shift the modal density in this range. For location 2 (Scenario 03-04-05), both peaks, which are around 180 Hz and 800 Hz, are eliminated and the results overlap almost perfectly. There is no unexpected decrease for this location. After the knee frequency, there is a remarkable difference between 5 and 10 kHz for all scenarios between PS01 and the experimental results. Apart from this, there are some small discrepancies throughout 900 Hz to 5 kHz, which are more apparent for the 0.60 bar cases (Scenario 01 and 04). The PS02 results show that the simulation–experiment curves match much better for the 5–10 kHz region, with some overshoot for the 0.90 bar and 1.20 bar cases (Scenario 02-03-05-06). However, for 0.60 bar (Scenarios 01 and 04), although the amplitude of the curves increases between 7 and 10 kHz, they are still well below the experimental results.
It is concluded that increasing the contact stiffness enhances the transmission of the high-frequency content of the impact force but this effect diminishes with decreasing impactor velocities. Thus, further increase in the contact stiffness parameters will work better for these cases, but it also increases the level of accelerations for the 0.90 bar and 1.20 bar simulations, which would lead to a mismatch with the experimental results. Although it is not considered here, a variable contact stiffness parameter with respect to impact velocity could lead to better results.