Semi-analytical three-dimensional elasticity solutions for generally laminated composite plates

2008 ◽  
Vol 27 (5) ◽  
pp. 899-917 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.F. Lü ◽  
W.Q. Chen ◽  
J.W. Shao
1992 ◽  
Vol 59 (2S) ◽  
pp. S166-S175 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Savoia ◽  
J. N. Reddy

The displacements in a laminated composite are represented as products of two sets of unknown functions, one of which is only a function of the thickness coordinate and the other is a function of the in-plane coordinates (i.e., separation of variables approach), and the minimization of the total potential energy is reduced to a sequence of iterative linear problems. Analytical solutions are developed for cross-ply and angle-ply laminated composite rectangular plates. The solution for simply-supported cross-ply plates under sinusoidal transverse load reduces to that of Pagano. Numerical results for stresses and displacements for antisymmetric angle-ply laminates are presented. The three-dimensional elasticity solutions developed are important because they can be used to study the behavior of composite laminates, in addition to serving as reference for approximate solutions by numerical methods and twodimensional theories.


Author(s):  
Shilei Han ◽  
Olivier A. Bauchau

In structural analysis, many components are approximated as plates. More often that not, classical plate theories, such as Kirchhoff or Reissner-Mindlin plate theories, form the basis of the analytical developments. The advantage of these approaches is that they leads to simple kinematic descriptions of the problem: the plate’s normal material line is assumed to remain straight and its displacement field is fully defined by three displacement and two rotation components. While such approach is capable of capturing the kinetic energy of the system accurately, it cannot represent the strain energy adequately. For instance, it is well known from three-dimensional elasticity theory that the normal material line will warp under load for laminated composite plates, leading to three-dimensional deformations that generate complex stress states. To overcome this problem, several high-order, refined plate theories have been proposed. While these approaches work well for some cases, they often lead to inefficient formulations because they introduce numerous additional variables. This paper presents a different approach to the problem: based on a finite element semi-discretization of the normal material line, plate equations are derived from three-dimensional elasticity using a rigorous dimensional reduction procedure.


2005 ◽  
Vol 297-300 ◽  
pp. 2740-2745
Author(s):  
Seok Yoon Han ◽  
Y.J. Ma ◽  
J.Y. Park

Shape optimization was performed to obtain the precise shape of cutouts including the internal shape of cutouts in laminated composite plates by three dimensional modeling using solid element. The volume control of the growth-strain method was implemented and the distributed parameter was chosen as Tsai-Hill failure index for shape optimization. In order to verify the validity of the obtained optimal shapes, the changes of the maximum Tsai-Hill failure index were examined for each load condition and cutouts. The following conclusions were obtained in this study; 1) It was found that growth-strain method was applied efficiently to shape optimization of three dimensional cutouts in anisotropic laminate composite, 2) The optimal three dimensional shapes of the various load conditions and cutouts were obtained, 3) The maximum Tsai-Hill failure index was reduced up to 68% when shape optimization was performed under the initial volume by volume control of growth-strain method.


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