A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
An Accurate Analysis for Sandwich Steel Beams with Graded Corrugated Core Under Dynamic Impulse
Abstract This paper addresses the dynamic loading characteristics of the shock tube onto sandwich steel beams as an efficient and accurate alternative to time consuming and complicated fluid structure interaction using finite element modeling. The corrugated sandwich steel beam consists of top and bottom flat substrates of steel 1018 and corrugated cores of steel 1008. The corrugated core layers are arranged with non-uniform thicknesses thus making sandwich beam graded. This sandwich beam is analogous to a steel beam with web and flanges. Substrates correspond to flanges and cores to web. The stress–strain relations of steel 1018 at high strain rates are measured using the split-Hopkinson pressure. Both carbon steels are assumed to follow bilinear strain hardening and strain rate-dependence. The present finite element modeling procedure with an improved dynamic impulse loading assumption is validated with a set of shock tube experiments, and it provides excellent correlation based on Russell error estimation with the test results. Four corrugated graded steel core arrangements are taken into account for core design parameters in order to maximize mitigation of blast load effects onto the structure. In addition, numerical study of four corrugated steel core placed in a reverse order is done using the validated finite element model. The dynamic behavior of the reversed steel core arrangement is compared with the normal core arrangement for deflections, contact force between support and specimen and plastic energy absorption.
An Accurate Analysis for Sandwich Steel Beams with Graded Corrugated Core Under Dynamic Impulse
Abstract This paper addresses the dynamic loading characteristics of the shock tube onto sandwich steel beams as an efficient and accurate alternative to time consuming and complicated fluid structure interaction using finite element modeling. The corrugated sandwich steel beam consists of top and bottom flat substrates of steel 1018 and corrugated cores of steel 1008. The corrugated core layers are arranged with non-uniform thicknesses thus making sandwich beam graded. This sandwich beam is analogous to a steel beam with web and flanges. Substrates correspond to flanges and cores to web. The stress–strain relations of steel 1018 at high strain rates are measured using the split-Hopkinson pressure. Both carbon steels are assumed to follow bilinear strain hardening and strain rate-dependence. The present finite element modeling procedure with an improved dynamic impulse loading assumption is validated with a set of shock tube experiments, and it provides excellent correlation based on Russell error estimation with the test results. Four corrugated graded steel core arrangements are taken into account for core design parameters in order to maximize mitigation of blast load effects onto the structure. In addition, numerical study of four corrugated steel core placed in a reverse order is done using the validated finite element model. The dynamic behavior of the reversed steel core arrangement is compared with the normal core arrangement for deflections, contact force between support and specimen and plastic energy absorption.
An Accurate Analysis for Sandwich Steel Beams with Graded Corrugated Core Under Dynamic Impulse
Rokaya, Asmita (author) / Kim, Jeongho (author)
International Journal of Steel Structures ; 18 ; 1541-1559
2018-04-30
19 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
An Accurate Analysis for Sandwich Steel Beams with Graded Corrugated Core Under Dynamic Impulse
Online Contents | 2018
|Bending behavior of graded corrugated truss core composite sandwich beams
British Library Online Contents | 2016
|Graded open-cell aluminium foam core sandwich beams
Tema Archive | 2005
|Graded open-cell aluminium foam core sandwich beams
British Library Online Contents | 2005
|Quasi-static response of sandwich steel beams with corrugated cores
Elsevier | 2015
|