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Effect of curvature on the impact damage characteristics and residual strength of composite plates
Author(s) -
Damodar Ambur,
James H. Starnes
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
39th aiaa/asme/asce/ahs/asc structures, structural dynamics, and materials conference and exhibit
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.1998-1881
Subject(s) - residual strength , materials science , curvature , composite material , residual , impact energy , radius , composite number , izod impact strength test , radius of curvature , structural engineering , ultimate tensile strength , geometry , mathematics , computer security , algorithm , computer science , engineering , mean curvature , mean curvature flow
The results of a study of the response and failure characteristics of thin, cylindrically cusrved, composite plates subjected to low-speed impact damage are presented. The results indicate that the plate radius and the plate thickness are important structural parameters that influence the nonlinear response of a plate for a given amount of impact energy. Analytical and experimental contact-force results are compared for several plates and the results correlate well. The impact-energy levels required to cause damage initiation and barely visible impact damage are a function of the plate radius for a given plate thickness. The impact-energy levels required to initiate impact damage for plates with a certain range of radii are greater than plates with other radii. The contact-force results corresponding to these impact-energy levels follow a similar trend. Residual strength results for plates with barely visible impact damage suggest that the compression-after-impact residual strength is also a function of plate radiu. The residual strength of impact-damaged flat plates appears to be lower than the residual strength of the corresponding cylindrically curved plates.

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