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Performance of a Hybrid Composite of Kevlar, Aluminum and Cabuya Fiber Against Ballistic Threats—Numerical and Experimental Study

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Abstract

The growing demand for lightweight and cost-effective vehicular armor systems has driven the development of hybrid multilayer architectures capable of improving ballistic resistance while reducing structural mass. This study evaluates the ballistic performance of a functionally graded aluminum–Kevlar–cabuya fiber composite system designed for vehicle door protection. A combined experimental–numerical framework was implemented, integrating ballistic testing according to NIJ 0108.01 and STANAG 4569 Level 1 standards with explicit dynamic finite element modeling based on the Johnson–Cook constitutive formulation for AA5083-H32. The multilayer configuration (25 mm aluminum/15 mm Kevlar 29/15 mm treated cabuya composite) successfully resisted 9 × 19 mm and 5.56 × 45 mm FMJ threats without complete perforation. Numerical simulations predicted a maximum back-face deformation of 52.75 mm under 9 mm impact, showing strong agreement with the experimental measurements (mean ± SD, n = 3). Post-impact microstructural analysis revealed a sequential energy dissipation mechanism governed by plastic deformation of the aluminum layer, Kevlar fibrillation and fragment retention, and controlled micro-cracking within the treated cabuya backing layer. With an areal density of 140.87 kg/m2, the system achieved a 19% weight reduction compared with conventional steel-based solutions. These results demonstrate the structural-scale feasibility of integrating treated cabuya fiber composites as active energy redistribution layers in certified hybrid vehicular armor systems.

Original languageEnglish
Article number174
JournalJournal of Composites Science
Volume10
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2026

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 by the authors.

Keywords

  • areal density
  • back-face deformation
  • ballistic impact
  • energy dissipation mechanisms
  • explicit dynamics
  • hybrid cabuya fiber composite
  • Johnson–Cook model
  • multilayer composite armor

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