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Effect of Buckling Modes on the Fatigue Life and Damage Tolerance of Stiffened Structures
Author(s) -
Carlos G. Dávila,
Chiara Bisagni,
Cheryl A. Rose
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
56th aiaa/asce/ahs/asc structures, structural dynamics, and materials conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2015-1436
Subject(s) - buckling , structural engineering , damage tolerance , materials science , computer science , composite material , engineering , composite number
The postbuckling response and the collapse of composite specimens with a co-cured hat stringer are investigated experimentally and numerically. These specimens are designed to evaluate the postbuckling response and the effect of an embedded defect on the collapse load and the mode of failure. Tests performed using controlled conditions and detailed instrumentation demonstrate that the damage tolerance, fatigue life, and collapse loads are closely tied with the mode of the postbuckling deformation, which can be different between two nominally identical specimens. Modes that tend to open skin/stringer defects are the most damaging to the structure. However, skin/stringer bond defects can also propagate under shearing modes. In this paper, the effects of initial shape imperfections on the postbuckling modes and the interaction between different postbuckling deformations and the propagation of skin/stringer bond defects under quasi-static or fatigue loads are examined

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