Benchmarks for Membrane and Bending Analysis of Laminated Shells
Part 1: Stiffness Matrix and Thermal Characteristics
Hopkins, P
First Published - December 2005 Softback Report - 35 Pages
Members Price: £32 ( $62 / €40 ) Non-Members Price: £65 ( $127 / €82 ) Order Ref:R0092
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Carbon fibre reinforced plastic (CFRP) is now frequently used in a
large variety of applications; sports goods such as golf clubs and
tennis rackets, primary structure of sports cars, from specialist
suppliers such as Lotus to Formula 1 Racing Cars, components in
commercial and fighter aircraft and in the space industry for
primary structure of satellites, antennae systems and the launch
vehicles themselves.
Structural components in the form of plates, shells, sandwich
panels, sandwich shells, beams and struts, are manufactured from
CFRP materials to provide a design with high strength-to-weight and
stiffness-to-weight ratios. This is achieved by using the minimum
number of plies of unidirectional material or woven fabric
orientated at various angles to provide a laminate that satisfies
the stiffness, strength, thermal distortion and functional
requirements. The thickness, orientation and lay-up of the plies
can produce laminates that exhibit coupling in membrane and bending
behaviour. Such characteristics can have significant effect on the
response of the laminate to mechanical and thermal loads.
Confirmation of the structural integrity of CFRP components is
generally achieved by qualification testing of the hardware.
Although verification of composite analysis against test results is
desirable this is often not achievable at the start of the design
process. The early design trade off studies are generally assessed
by use of analysis techniques, Finite Element Analysis and other
purpose-written programs, internal or proprietary, applying
Classical Lamination Theory, (CLT). Experience shows that the
availability of an analysis capability in a program does not
guarantee correct implementation or application by engineers. There
is a need to provide verification examples that demonstrate correct
implementation and assist the engineer in effective application.
This is evident particularly with respect to transverse shear
properties of laminates where a number of different sources
provided a number of different answers.
Benchmarking basic laminate analysis can be considered in three
primary categories; membrane and bending stiffness characteristics;
membrane and bending strength analysis; and transverse shear
properties, stiffness and strength. A number of benchmark problems
to address these aspects of composite analysis have been collected
from a variety of sources to supplement those published some years
ago by NAFEMS, (ref 12). This document discusses classical laminate
analysis and defines benchmark problems for the membrane and
bending stiffness analysis of laminates. The benchmarking of the
more complex and specialist subjects such as fracture and crack
propagation are the subject of a more recent NAFEMS report, (ref
13).
The use of benchmark problems to investigate the implementation of
CLT in the available analysis tools provide the engineer with
information on the significance of ply thickness, ply orientation
and stacking sequence with respect to laminate stiffness
characteristics, thermal characteristics and moisture absorption
characteristics. They also verify the implementation of Classical
Lamination Theory in proprietary software and how the membrane,
bending and coupling material properties are determined in the
programs.
Contents
1. Introduction
2. Classical Lamination Theory
2.1 Laminate Membrane and Bending Stiffness Characteristics
2.2 Laminate Membrane and Bending Hygrothermal Characteristics
3. Membrane and Bending Characteristics of Laminates
4. Benchmark Examples For Laminated Shell Membrane and Bending
Material Characteristics
5. Finite Element Program Output for Laminated Shell Benchmark
Problems
5.1 Benchmark Problem 1 LSMC1 [0/0/0/0] (Table 5.1)
5.2 Benchmark Problem 2 LSMC2 [0/0/0/0] (Table 5.1)
5.3 Benchmark Problem 3 LSMC3 [0/60/-60/0/0/-60/60/0] (Table 5.1)
5.4 Benchmark Problem 4 LSMC4 [0/90] (Table 5.2)
5.5 Benchmark Problem 5 LSMC5 [45/90/0] (Table 5.2)
5.6 Benchmark Problem 6 LSMC6 [90/45/-45/0] (Table 5.2)
6. Benchmark Examples for Material Characteristics From Unit Cases
6.1 Laminated Shell Material Characteristics Benchmark Problem
LSMC1
6.2 Laminated Shell Material Characteristics Benchmark Problem
LSMC2
6.3 Laminated Shell Material Characteristics Benchmark Problem
LSMC3
6.4 Laminated Shell Material Characteristics Benchmark Problem
LSMC4
6.5 Laminated Shell Material Characteristics Benchmark Problem
LSMC5
6.6 Laminated Shell Material Characteristics Benchmark Problem
LSMC6
7. References
Members Price: £32 ( $62 / €40 ) Non-Members Price: £65 ( $127 / €82 ) Order Ref:R0092
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