http://www.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123012131


10/17/2005 - WRIGHT-PATTERSON AIR FORCE BASE, Ohio (AFPN) -- Engineers 
here are testing a new kind of transparent armor -- stronger and 
lighter than traditional materials -- that could stop armor-piercing 
weapons from penetrating vehicle windows.

The Air Force Research Laboratory's materials and manufacturing 
directorate is testing aluminum oxynitride -- ALONtm -- as a 
replacement for the traditional multi-layered glass transparencies now 
used in existing ground and air armored vehicles.

The test is being done in conjunction with the Army Research 
Laboratory at Aberdeen Proving Grounds, Md., and University of Dayton 
Research Institute, Ohio.

ALONtm is a ceramic compound with a high compressive strength and 
durability. When polished, it is the premier transparent armor for use 
in armored vehicles, said. 1st Lt. Joseph La Monica, transparent armor 
sub-direction lead

"The substance itself is light years ahead of glass," he said, adding 
that it offers "higher performance and lighter weight."

Traditional transparent armor is thick layers of bonded glass. The new 
armor combines the transparent ALONtm piece as a strike plate, a 
middle section of glass and a polymer backing. Each layer is visibly 
thinner than the traditional layers.

ALONtm is virtually scratch resistant, offers substantial impact 
resistance, and provides better durability and protection against 
armor piercing threats, at roughly half the weight and half the 
thickness of traditional glass transparent armor, said the lieutenant.

In a June 2004demonstration, an ALONtm test pieces held up to both a 
.30 caliber Russian M-44 sniper rifle and a .50 caliber Browning 
Sniper Rifle with armor piercing bullets. While the bullets pierced 
the glass samples, the armor withstood the impact with no penetration.

In extensive testing, ALONtm has performed well against multiple hits 
of .30 caliber armor piercing rounds -- typical of anti-aircraft fire, 
Lieutenant La Monica said. Tests focusing on multiple hits from .50 
caliber rounds and improvised explosive devices are in the works.

The lieutenant is optimistic about the results because the physical 
properties and design of the material are intended to stop higher 
level threats.

"The higher the threat, the more savings you're going to get," he 
said. "With glass, to get the protection against higher threats, you 
have to keep building layers upon layers. But with ALONtm, the 
material only needs to be increased a few millimeters."

This ability to add the needed protection with only a small amount of 
material is very advantageous, said Ron Hoffman, an investigator at 
University of Dayton Research Institute.

"When looking at higher level threats, you want the protection, not 
the weight," Mr. Hoffman said. "Achieving protection at lighter 
weights will allow the armor to be more easily integrated into 
vehicles."

Mr. Hoffman also pointed out the benefit of durability with ALONtm.

"Eventually, with a conventional glass surface, degradation takes 
place and results in a loss of transparency," Mr. Hoffman said. 
"Things such as sand have little or no impact on ALONtm, and it 
probably has a life expectancy many times that of glass."

The scratch-resistant quality will greatly increase the transparency 
of the armor, giving military members more visual awareness on the 
battlefield.

"It all comes down to survivability and being able to see what's out 
there and to make decisions while having the added protection," Mr. 
Hoffman said.

The Army is looking to use the new armor as windows in ground 
vehicles, like the Humvee, Lieutenant La Monica said. The Air Force is 
exploring its use for "in-flight protective transparencies for low, 
slow-flying aircraft. These include the C-130 Hercules, C-17 
Globemaster III, A-10 Thunderbolt II and helicopters.

While some see the possibilities of this material as limitless, 
manufacturability, size and cost are issues the lab is dealing with 
before the armor can transition to the field, the lieutenant said.

"Traditional transparent armor costs a little over $3 per square inch. 
The ALONtm Transparent Armor cost is $10 to $15 per square inch," 
Lieutenant La Monica said. "The difficulties arise with heating and 
polishing processes, which lead to higher costs. But we are looking at 
more cost effective alternatives."

Lieutenant La Monica said experimenting with the polishing process has 
proven beneficial.

"We found that by polishing it a certain way, we increased the 
strength of the material by two-fold," he said.

Currently, size is also limited because equipment needed to heat 
larger pieces is expensive. To help lower costs, the lieutenant said 
researchers are looking at design variations that use smaller pieces 
of the armor tiled together to form larger windows.

Lowering cost by using a commercial grade material is also an option, 
and the results have been promising.

"So far, the difference between the lower-grade material and higher 
purity in ballistic tests is minimal," he said.

Lieutenant La Monica said once the material can be manufactured in 
large quantities to meet the military's needs, and the cost brought 
down, the durability and strength of ALONtm will prove beneficial to 
the warfighter.

"It might cost more in the beginning, but it is going to cost less in 
the long run because you are going to have to replace it less," he 
said.


xponent
Scotty Maru
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