Study on Impact Collapse Characteristics of CFRP Double-Hat Members According to Stacking Angle

2014 ◽  
Vol 566 ◽  
pp. 623-628
Author(s):  
Ju Ho Choi ◽  
Woo Chae Hwang ◽  
Yong Jun Yang ◽  
Cheon Seok Cha ◽  
In Young Yang

There has been greater demand on fuel mileage improvement and reduced CO2 emission in automobile without sacrificing safety. To meet these requirements, light weight car body is widely adopted. In addition, advanced country already started the strict regulation on fuel mileage and exhaust gas emission because of energy depletion by automobile and severe environmental contamination. Especially, during the initial stage of car design, side member of front side that absorbs significant amount of energy should be precisely evaluated for collapsing and energy absorption prior to estimate safety performance on frontal collision of car. Therefore, CFRP double hat and hat-shaped member were prepared to supplement the issues of splitting between “ᄃ” shaped member and planar one. According to stacking configuration, energy absorption characteristics via impact collapsing experiment were evaluated to acquire CFRP double-hat shaped member.

2006 ◽  
Vol 324-325 ◽  
pp. 411-414
Author(s):  
Kil Sung Lee ◽  
Kwang Hee Im ◽  
In Young Yang

The purpose of this study was to develop lightweight hat shaped section side members which absorb the most of the energy during the front-end collision of vehicle. The hybrid side member was manufactured by combination of aluminum and CFRP. An aluminum or CFRP (Carbon Fiber Reinforced Plastics) member is representative lightweight materials but its axial collapse mechanism is different from each other. The aluminum member absorbs energy by stable plastic deformation, while the CFRP member absorbs energy by unstable brittle failure with higher specific strength and stiffness than those in the aluminum member. Based on the respective collapse characteristics of CFRP side and aluminum members, the hybrid side members were tested on the axial collapse loads to get a synergy effect when the member is combined with the advantages of each members, such as energy absorption by the stable folding deformation of the aluminum member and by the high specific strength and stiffness of the CFRP member. Energy absorption capability and collapse mode of the hybrid side members were analyzed.


2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Herbert Roeser ◽  
Dilip Kalyankar

Ships are an integral part of modern commercial transport, leisure travel, and military system. A diesel engine was used for the first time for the propulsion of a ship sometime in the 1910s and has been the choice for propulsion and power generation, ever since. Since the first model used in ship propulsion, the diesel engine has come a long way with several technological advances. A diesel engine has a particularly high thermal efficiency. Added to it, the higher energy density of the diesel fuel compared to gasoline fuel makes it inherently, the most efficient internal combustion engine. The modern diesel engine also has a very unique ability to work with a variety of fuels like diesel, heavy fuel oil, biodiesel, vegetable oils, and several other crude oil distillates which is very important considering the shortage of petroleum fuels that we face today. In spite of being highly efficient and popular and in spite of all the technological advances, the issue of exhaust gas emissions has plagued a diesel engine. This issue has gained a lot of importance since 1990s when IMO, EU, and the EPA came up with the Tier I exhaust gas emission norms for the existing engine in order to reduce the NOx and SOx. Harsher Tier II and Tier III norms were later announced for newer engines. Diesel fuels commonly used in marine engines are a form of residual fuel, also know as Dregs or Heavy Fuel Oil and are essentially the by products of crude oil distillation process used to produce lighter petroleum fuels like marine distillate fuel and gasoline. They are cheaper than marine distillate fuels but are also high in nitrogen, sulfur and ash content. This greatly increases the NOx and SOx in the exhaust gas emission. Ship owners are trapped between the need to use residual fuels, due to cost of the large volume of fuel consumed, in order to keep the operation of their ships to a competitive level on one hand and on the other hand the need to satisfy the stringent pollution norms as established by the pollution control agencies worldwide. Newer marine diesel engines are being designed to meet the Tier II and Tier III norms wherever applicable but the existing diesel engine owners are still operating their engines with the danger of not meeting the applicable pollution norms worldwide. Here we make an effort to look at some of the measure that the existing marine diesel engine owners can take to reduce emissions and achieve at least levels prescribed in Tier I. Proper maintenance and upkeep of the engine components can be effectively used to reduce the exhaust gas emission. We introduced a pilot program on diesel engine performance monitoring in North America about two years ago and it has yielded quite satisfying results for several shipping companies and more and more ship owners are looking at the option of implementing this program on their ships.


Author(s):  
Michael Ryvkin ◽  
Viacheslav Slesarenko ◽  
Andrej Cherkaev ◽  
Stephan Rudykh

The paper describes a fault-tolerant design of a special two-dimensional beam lattice. The morphology of such lattices was suggested in the theoretical papers (Cherkaev and Ryvkin 2019 Arch. Appl. Mech. 89 , 485–501; Cherkaev and Ryvkin 2019 Arch. Appl. Mech. 89 , 503–519), where its superior properties were found numerically. The proposed design consists of beam elements with two different thicknesses; the lattice is macro-isotropic and stretch dominated. Here, we experimentally verify the fault-tolerant properties of these lattices. The specimens were three-dimensional-printed from the VeroWhite elastoplastic material. The lattice is subjected to uniaxial tensile loading. Due to its morphology, the failed beams are evenly distributed in the lattice at the initial stage of damage; at this stage, the material remains intact, preserves its bearing ability, and supports relatively high strains before the final failure. At the initial phase of damage, the thinner beams buckle; then another group of separated thin beams plastically yield and rupture. The fatal macro-crack propagates after the distributed damage reaches a critical level. This initial distributed damage stage allows for a better energy absorption rate before the catastrophic failure of the structure. The experimental results are supported by simulations which confirm that the proposed fault-tolerant material possesses excellent energy absorption properties thanks to the distributed damage stage phenomenon. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Modelling of dynamic phenomena and localization in structured media (part 2)’.


2015 ◽  
Vol 72 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Arizal, M. A. A. ◽  
Jaafar, M. N. M.

A research has been done to observe the effect of varying the retainer angle on the performance of oil burner in terms of exhaust gas emissions and temperatures. Retainer was a flame stabilizer used to stabilize the flame, improve mixing between air and fuel and affect the formation of emissions such as carbon monoxide (CO), carbon dioxide (CO2), oxides of nitrogen (NOX), and sulfur dioxide (SO2). These emissions can cause harm to the world ecosystem. One of the methods to reduce emissions was by varying the retainer's blade angle to certain angle that complete the combustion with high efficiencies and less emissions. In this research, an oil burner with four different retainer angles has been investigated using a combustor of one meter length. Tests were conducted using diesel as feedstock. Four different retainer angles used are 15°, 30° (baseline), 45°, and 60° with swirl number 0.2016, 0.4344, 0.7524, and 1.3032. From the experiment, data shown that swirling flow affect the formation of recirculation zone thus provides the aerodynamics blockage to stabilize the flame and emissions reduced due to varying the retainer angles and the best retainer angle was achieved by consider the exhaust gas emission reduction.


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