Researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology have designed a method that uses a high-intensity laser to blast microscale projectiles into a small sample at velocities that approach the speed of sound. The system analyzes the energy exchange between the microscale projectiles and the sample of interest at the micro level and then uses scaling methods to predict the puncture-resistance of the sample material against larger energetic projectiles, such as bullets encountered in real-world situations. The researchers used this new method to evaluate several materials, including a widely used compound for bulletproof glass, a novel nanocomposite, and the strong, all-carbon nanomaterial known as graphene.
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