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The response of the MiL-Lx leg fitted with combat boots under impact loading

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dc.contributor.author Pandelani, Thanyani A
dc.contributor.author Sono, TJ
dc.contributor.author Reinecke, John D
dc.contributor.author Nurick, GN
dc.date.accessioned 2015-08-17T13:32:29Z
dc.date.available 2015-08-17T13:32:29Z
dc.date.issued 2014-01
dc.identifier.citation Pandelani, T.A., Sono, T.J., Reinecke, J.D. and Nurick, G.N. 2014. The response of the MiL-Lx leg fitted with combat boots under impact loading. In: 4th International Conference on Impact Loading of Lightweight Structures, the One & Only Cape Town Hotel, 12-16 January 2014 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10204/8023
dc.description Copyright: University of Cape Town. 4th International Conference on Impact Loading of Lightweight Structures, the One & Only Cape Town Hotel, 12-16 January 2014. en_US
dc.description.abstract Anti-Vehicular Landmines (AVLs) or under-belly Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) or even a side-attack IEDs are found to be some of the major threat for military vehicles and their occupants. The lower extremities of the occupants are very prone to the injuries more especially during underbelly detonation of the AVL or IED due to their spatial proximity to the rapid deforming floor. Lower limb surrogate legs, such as a Hybrid III or Military Lower Extremity (MiL-Lx) are used to quantify the impulse loading on the lower extremity when subjected to the rapid deforming floor. Military boots could be used by the occupants to mitigate the blast loading impact on the lower extremities. This work present the response of the MiL-Lx leg fitted with two different combat boots (Meindl and Lowa) and exposed to typical blast loading conditions. The purpose of the work was to evaluate the potential load mitigation effects of the two boots using the MiL-Lx leg. The blast loading conditions were simulated using the modified lower limb impactor at several loading velocities spanning from 2.7-10.2 m/s. The MiL-Lx leg was instrumented with triaxial load cells located at the upper and lower tibia. The results shows that both combat boots attenuate the peak force only at the lower tibia while showing slight increase of the peak force at the upper tibia. Within the lower loading severities, the Meindl desert combat boot shows a better peak force attenuation than the Lowa desert combat boot at the upper tibia. Both boots shows a delay in time to peak force at both upper and lower tibia. The Meindl boot shows a longer delay in time to peak force than the Lowa desert combat boot. Both boots shows an increase in impulse determined at the upper and lower tibia and across the loading severities. The increase in impulse is attributed to the presence of the boot materials and the thicker boot showed a higher increase. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher University of Cape Town en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries Worklist;12705
dc.subject Anti-Vehicular landmines en_US
dc.subject AVLs en_US
dc.subject Improvised explosive devices en_US
dc.subject IEDs en_US
dc.subject Military lower extremity en_US
dc.subject MiL-Lx en_US
dc.title The response of the MiL-Lx leg fitted with combat boots under impact loading en_US
dc.type Article en_US
dc.identifier.apacitation Pandelani, T. A., Sono, T., Reinecke, J. D., & Nurick, G. (2014). The response of the MiL-Lx leg fitted with combat boots under impact loading. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/8023 en_ZA
dc.identifier.chicagocitation Pandelani, Thanyani A, TJ Sono, John D Reinecke, and GN Nurick "The response of the MiL-Lx leg fitted with combat boots under impact loading." (2014) http://hdl.handle.net/10204/8023 en_ZA
dc.identifier.vancouvercitation Pandelani TA, Sono T, Reinecke JD, Nurick G. The response of the MiL-Lx leg fitted with combat boots under impact loading. 2014; http://hdl.handle.net/10204/8023. en_ZA
dc.identifier.ris TY - Article AU - Pandelani, Thanyani A AU - Sono, TJ AU - Reinecke, John D AU - Nurick, GN AB - Anti-Vehicular Landmines (AVLs) or under-belly Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) or even a side-attack IEDs are found to be some of the major threat for military vehicles and their occupants. The lower extremities of the occupants are very prone to the injuries more especially during underbelly detonation of the AVL or IED due to their spatial proximity to the rapid deforming floor. Lower limb surrogate legs, such as a Hybrid III or Military Lower Extremity (MiL-Lx) are used to quantify the impulse loading on the lower extremity when subjected to the rapid deforming floor. Military boots could be used by the occupants to mitigate the blast loading impact on the lower extremities. This work present the response of the MiL-Lx leg fitted with two different combat boots (Meindl and Lowa) and exposed to typical blast loading conditions. The purpose of the work was to evaluate the potential load mitigation effects of the two boots using the MiL-Lx leg. The blast loading conditions were simulated using the modified lower limb impactor at several loading velocities spanning from 2.7-10.2 m/s. The MiL-Lx leg was instrumented with triaxial load cells located at the upper and lower tibia. The results shows that both combat boots attenuate the peak force only at the lower tibia while showing slight increase of the peak force at the upper tibia. Within the lower loading severities, the Meindl desert combat boot shows a better peak force attenuation than the Lowa desert combat boot at the upper tibia. Both boots shows a delay in time to peak force at both upper and lower tibia. The Meindl boot shows a longer delay in time to peak force than the Lowa desert combat boot. Both boots shows an increase in impulse determined at the upper and lower tibia and across the loading severities. The increase in impulse is attributed to the presence of the boot materials and the thicker boot showed a higher increase. DA - 2014-01 DB - ResearchSpace DP - CSIR KW - Anti-Vehicular landmines KW - AVLs KW - Improvised explosive devices KW - IEDs KW - Military lower extremity KW - MiL-Lx LK - https://researchspace.csir.co.za PY - 2014 T1 - The response of the MiL-Lx leg fitted with combat boots under impact loading TI - The response of the MiL-Lx leg fitted with combat boots under impact loading UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10204/8023 ER - en_ZA


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