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Analysis of Stainless Steel Sandwich Panels with a Metal Foam Core for Lightweight Fan Blade Design
Author(s) -
James B. Min,
Louis J. Ghosn,
Bradley A. Lerch,
S. V. Raj,
Fredric Holland,
Mohan G. Hebsur
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
nasa technical reports server (nasa)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2004-1836
Subject(s) - metal foam , aluminium foam sandwich , materials science , composite material , core (optical fiber) , sandwich structured composite , blade (archaeology) , syntactic foam , structural engineering , engineering , aluminium
The quest for cheap, low density and high performance materials in the design of aircraft and rotorcraft engine fan and propeller blades poses immense challenges to the materials and structural design engineers. Traditionally, these components have been fabricated using expensive materials such as light weight titanium alloys, polymeric composite materials and carbon-carbon composites. The present study investigates the use of a sandwich foam fan blade made up of solid face sheets and a metal foam core. The face sheets and the metal foam core material were an aerospace grade precipitation hardened 17-4 PH stainless steel with high strength and high toughness. The stiffness of the sandwich structure is increased by separating the two face sheets by a foam core. The resulting structure possesses a high stiffness while being lighter than a similar solid construction. Since the face sheets carry the applied bending loads, the sandwich architecture is a viable engineering concept. The material properties of 17-4 PH metal foam are reviewed briefly to describe the characteristics of the sandwich structure for a fan blade application. A vibration analysis for natural frequencies and a detailed stress analysis on the 17-4 PH sandwich foam blade design for different combinations of skin thickness and core volume are presented with a comparison to a solid titanium blade.

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