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Coupled Multi-Disciplinary Simulation of Composite Engine Structures in Propulsion Environment
Author(s) -
C. C. Chamis,
Surendra N. Singhal
Publication year - 1992
Publication title -
volume 5: manufacturing materials and metallurgy; ceramics; structures and dynamics; controls, diagnostics and instrumentation; education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.1115/92-gt-006
Subject(s) - finite element method , vibration , materials science , nonlinear system , propulsion , noise (video) , structural engineering , composite number , acoustics , structural acoustics , computer science , engineering , composite material , aerospace engineering , physics , artificial intelligence , image (mathematics) , quantum mechanics
A computational simulation procedure is described for the coupled response of multi-layered multi-material composite engine structural components which are subjected to simultaneous multi-disciplinary thermal, structural, vibration, and acoustic loadings including the effect of hostile environments. The simulation is based on a three dimensional finite element analysis technique in conjunction with structural mechanics codes and with acoustic analysis methods. The composite material behavior is assessed at the various composite scales, i.e., the laminate/ply/constituents (fiber/matrix), via a nonlinear material characterization model. Sample cases exhibiting nonlinear geometrical, material, loading, and environmental behavior of aircraft engine fan blades, are presented. Results for deformed shape, vibration frequency, mode shapes, and acoustic noise emitted from the fan blade, are discussed for their coupled effect in hot and humid environments. Results such as acoustic noise for coupled composite-mechanics/heat transfer/structural/vibration/acoustic analyses demonstrate the effectiveness of coupled multi-disciplinary computational simulation and the various advantages of composite materials compared to metals.

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