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Dive into the research topics where S.E. Rigby is active.

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Featured researches published by S.E. Rigby.


Measurement Science and Technology | 2015

A large scale experimental approach to the measurement of spatially and temporally localised loading from the detonation of shallow-buried explosives

S.D. Clarke; S.D. Fay; J.A. Warren; A. Tyas; S.E. Rigby; I. Elgy

A large scale experimental approach to the direct measurement of the spatial and temporal variation in loading resulting from an explosive event has been developed. The approach utilises a fixed target plate through which Hopkinson pressure bars are inserted. This technique allows the pressure-time histories for an array of bars to be generated, giving data over a large area of interest. A numerical interpolation technique has also been developed to allow for the full pressure-time history for any point on the target plate to be estimated and hence total imparted impulse to be calculated. The principles underlying the design of the experimental equipment are discussed, along with the importance of carefully controlling the explosive preparation, and the method and location of the detonation initiation. Initial results showing the key features of the loading recorded and the consistency attainable by this method are presented along with the data interpolation routines used to estimate the loading on the entire face.


International Journal of Protective Structures | 2014

The Negative Phase of the Blast Load

S.E. Rigby; A. Tyas; Terry Bennett; S.D. Clarke; S.D. Fay

Following the positive phase of a blast comes a period where the pressure falls below atmospheric pressure known as the negative phase. Whilst the positive phase of the blast is well understood, validation of the negative phase is rare in the literature, and as such it is often incorrectly treated or neglected altogether. Herein, existing methods of approximating the negative phase are summarised and recommendations of which form to use are made based on experimental validation. Also, through numerical simulations, the impact of incorrectly modelling the negative phase has been shown and its implications discussed.


International Journal of Protective Structures | 2014

A Numerical Investigation of Blast Loading and Clearing on Small Targets

S.E. Rigby; A. Tyas; Terry Bennett; S.D. Fay; S.D. Clarke; J.A. Warren

When a blast wave strikes a finite target, diffraction of the blast wave around the free edge causes a rarefaction clearing wave to propagate along the loaded face and relieve the pressure acting at any point it passes over. For small targets, the time taken for this clearing wave to traverse the loaded face will be small in relation to the duration of loading. Previous studies have not shown what happens in the late-time stages of clearing relief, nor the mechanism by which the cleared reflected pressure decays to approach the incident pressure. Current design guidance assumes a series of interacting clearing waves propagate over the target face – this assumption is tested in this article by using numerical analysis to evaluate the blast pressure acting on small targets subjected to blast loads. It is shown that repeat propagations of the rarefaction waves do not occur and new model is proposed, based on an over-expanded region of air in front of the loaded face of the target.


International Journal of Protective Structures | 2015

Observations from Preliminary Experiments on Spatial and Temporal Pressure Measurements from Near-Field Free Air Explosions

S.E. Rigby; A. Tyas; S.D. Clarke; S.D. Fay; J.J. Reay; J.A. Warren; Matt Gant; I. Elgy

It is self-evident that a crucial step in analysing the performance of protective structures is to be able to accurately quantify the blast load arising from a high explosive detonation. For structures located near to the source of a high explosive detonation, the resulting pressure is extremely high in magnitude and highly non-uniform over the face of the target. There exists very little direct measurement of blast parameters in the near-field, mainly attributed to the lack of instrumentation sufficiently robust to survive extreme loading events yet sensitive enough to capture salient features of the blast. Instead literature guidance is informed largely by early numerical analyses and parametric studies. Furthermore, the lack of an accurate, reliable data set has prevented subsequent numerical analyses from being validated against experimental trials. This paper presents an experimental methodology that has been developed in part to enable such experimental data to be gathered. The experimental apparatus comprises an array of Hopkinson pressure bars, fitted through holes in a target, with the loaded faces of the bars flush with the target face. Thus, the bars are exposed to the normally or obliquely reflected shocks from the impingement of the blast wave with the target. Pressure-time recordings are presented along with associated Arbitary-Langrangian-Eulerian modelling using the LS-DYNA explicit numerical code. Experimental results are corrected for the effects of dispersion of the propagating waves in the pressure bars, enabling accurate characterisation of the peak pressures and impulses from these loadings. The combined results are used to make comments on the mechanism of the pressure load for very near-field blast events.


International Journal of Protective Structures | 2015

Angle of Incidence Effects on Far-Field Positive and Negative Phase Blast Parameters

S.E. Rigby; S.D. Fay; A. Tyas; J.A. Warren; S.D. Clarke

The blast overpressure acting on a rigid target is known to vary between the normally reflected overpressure and the incident overpressure as a function of the angle between the target and the direction of travel of the blast wave. Literature guidance for determining the exact effects of angle of incidence are unclear, particularly when considering the negative phase. This paper presents the results from a series of well controlled experiments where pressure transducers are used to record the pressure-time history acting on the face of a large, rigid target at various angles of incidence for varying sizes of hemispherical PE4 charge and stand-off distances. The test data demonstrated remarkable repeatability, and excellent agreement with semi-empirical predictions for normally reflected overpressures. The oblique results show that peak overpressure, impulse and duration are highly dependent on angle of incidence for the positive phase, and are invariant of angle of incidence for the negative phase.


Applied Mechanics and Materials | 2011

Clearing of Blast Waves on Finite-Sized Targets – an Overlooked Approach

A. Tyas; Terry Bennett; J.A. Warren; S.D. Fay; S.E. Rigby

The total impulse imparted to a target by an impinging blast wave is a key loading parameter for the design of blast-resistant structures and façades. Simple, semi-empirical approaches for the prediction of blast impulse on a structure are well established and are accurate in cases where the lateral dimensions of the structure are sufficiently large. However, if the lateral dimensions of the target are relatively small in comparison to the length of the incoming blast wave, air flow around the edges of the structure will lead to the propagation of rarefaction or clearing waves across the face of the target, resulting in a premature reduction of load and hence, a reduction in the total impulse imparted to the structure. This effect is well-known; semi-empirical models for the prediction of clearing exist, but several recent numerical and experimental studies have cast doubt on their accuracy and physical basis. In fact, this issue was addressed over half a century ago in a little known technical report at the Sandia Laboratory, USA. This paper presents the basis of this overlooked method along with predictions of the clearing effect. These predictions, which are very simple to incorporate in predictions of blast loading, have been carefully validated by the current authors, by experimental testing and numerical modelling. The paper presents a discussion of the limits of the method, concluding that it is accurate for relatively long stand-off blast loading events, and giving some indication of improvements that are necessary if the method is to be applicable to shorter stand-off cases.


International Journal of Protective Structures | 2016

Experimental studies of the effect of rapid afterburn on shock development of near-field explosions

A. Tyas; J.J. Reay; S.D. Fay; S.D. Clarke; S.E. Rigby; J.A. Warren; D.J. Pope

Many conventional high explosives do not contain sufficient internal oxygen to fully combust the gaseous products which result from detonation of the explosive material. Because of this, under-oxygenated explosives continue to burn after detonation. This process, called afterburn, is known to influence the late-time pressure and energy released by the explosive, which has particular significance for confined explosives. Recent experimental work at the University of Sheffield, along with a small number of previous studies, has shown that some afterburn occurs at timescales commensurate with the development of the shock wave. This article presents the results from a series of tests measuring the reflected pressure acting on a rigid target following the detonation of small explosive charges. High-speed video is used to capture the emerging structure of the detonation products and air shock, while the spatial and temporal distributions of the reflected pressure are recorded using an array of 17 Hopkinson pressure bars set flush with an effectively rigid target. Tests are conducted in inert atmospheres and oxygen-rich atmospheres in order to assess the contribution of rapid afterburn on the development of the shock front and interaction with a rigid target situated close to the explosive charge. The results show that early-stage afterburn has a significant influence on the reflected shock parameters in the near-field.


International Journal of Impact Engineering | 2015

Displacement timer pins: An experimental method for measuring the dynamic deformation of explosively loaded plates

S.D. Fay; S.E. Rigby; A. Tyas; S.D. Clarke; J.J. Reay; J.A. Warren; R. Brown

Abstract The measurement of dynamic deformation of an explosively loaded plate is an extremely onerous task. Existing techniques such as digital image correlation are expensive and the equipment may be damaged by explosively driven debris/ejecta, particularly if it is necessary to locate such equipment close to loaded elements which are likely to fail. A new, inexpensive and robust measurement technique for use in full-scale blast testing is presented, which involves the placement of displacement timer pins (DTPs) at pre-defined distances from the rear surface of the centre of a plate. A strain gauge on the perimeter of each pin records the time at which the plate comes into contact with the end of each DTP and hence has deformed to that value of displacement, giving a direct measure of the time-varying deformation at a discrete point on the plate. An experimental proof-of-concept was conducted and the results are compared with numerical displacements determined using LS-DYNA. The numerical and experimental results were in very good agreement, which suggests that the proposed experimental method offers a valuable means for determining the full-scale response of structures subjected to blast loads in aggressive environments. Further improvements to the experimental procedure are outlined, along with applications where the DTPs are particularly suited.


Measurement Science and Technology | 2016

Design of a split Hopkinson pressure bar with partial lateral confinement

A.D. Barr; S.D. Clarke; S.E. Rigby; A. Tyas; J.A. Warren

This paper presents the design of a modified split Hopkinson pressure bar (SHPB) where partial lateral con- finement of the specimen is provided by the inertia of a fluid annulus contained in a long steel reservoir. In contrast to unconfined testing, or a constant cell pressure applied before axial loading, lateral restraint is permitted to develop throughout the axial loading: this enables the high-strain-rate shear behaviour of soils to be characterised under conditions which are more representative of buried explosive events. A pressure transducer located in the wall of the reservoir allows lateral stresses to be quantified, and a dispersion-correction technique is used to provide accurate measurements of axial stress and strain. Preliminary numerical modelling is utilised to inform the experimental design, and the capability of the apparatus is demonstrated with specimen results for a dry quartz sand.


Journal of Structural Engineering-asce | 2017

Approach to Developing Design Charts for Quantifying the Influence of Blast Wave Clearing on Target Deformation

S.E. Rigby; A. Tyas; S.D. Clarke; Ghani Razaqpur

AbstractIf a structural component is located close to the free edge of a building, clearing of the blast wave around the target edge may significantly influence the temporal characteristics of the applied pressure. Because of this, traditional analysis methods assuming a linear decaying load may not be valid, particularly if the blast event imparts a relatively large impulse from the negative phase. Treatment of this phenomenon is brief in the literature, and its influence is usually neglected. This article presents an approach to quantifying the influence of clearing on target deformation, through rigorous analysis of elastic–perfectly-plastic equivalent single-degree-of-freedom (SDOF) systems. The cleared load is evaluated for structural components situated at various distances from the free edge of a reflecting surface using the Hudson acoustic approximation. The results from the SDOF analyses are then used to draw up design charts for determination of the likely influence clearing may have on the desi...

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A. Tyas

University of Sheffield

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S.D. Clarke

University of Sheffield

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J.A. Warren

University of Sheffield

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S.D. Fay

University of Sheffield

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J.J. Reay

University of Sheffield

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I. Elgy

Defence Science and Technology Laboratory

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M. Gant

Defence Science and Technology Laboratory

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A.D. Barr

University of Sheffield

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D.J. Pope

Defence Science and Technology Laboratory

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