scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Buckling of unilaterally constrained plates: Applications to the study of delaminations in layered structures

TLDR
In this article, a combined experimental and analytical investigation of the problem of buckling of unilaterally constrained, finite, rectangular, elastic plates is reported, where the plates are modeled along the lines of classical plate theory employing the Kirchhoff-love hypothesis.
Abstract
The results from a combined experimental and analytical investigation of the problem of buckling of unilaterally constrained, finite, rectangular, elastic plates is reported. The plates are modeled along the lines of classical plate theory employing the Kirchhoff-Love hypothesis. The presence of a unilateral constraint is accounted for through the use of a nonlinear elastic foundation model that exhibits a deformation sign dependent force-displacement relation. Using Galerkin's method, the resulting system of governing nonlinear equations are solved iteratively. Different boundary conditions are considered and the results for some boundary conditions are compared and shown to be in good agreement with ‘exact’ results reported earlier for infinite plates. The results from an experimental investigation has further revealed that the buckling mode of the plate may involve regions or points of contact with the substrate beneath the buckling plate. The shadow Moire technique is used to show clearly that the mode shape is periodic and contains points and/or regions of contact. The results obtained from the theoretical investigation are found to bound the experimental values. It is clear that the stiffness of a post-buckled plate with unilateral constraints is highly influenced by whether the buckled portion involves points (or regions) of contact or not. Thus, in analytical model development, associated with addressing the problem of delamination buckling in layered plates, the possibility of the delaminated portion contacting the substrate beneath cannot be excluded. The present study has demonstrated the validity of using nonlinear foundation models in the buckling analysis of unilaterally constrained rectangular plates.

read more

Citations
More filters
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Progress of unilateral contact buckling of steel skin sheet in composite wall

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the progress of unilateral contact buckling of steel skin sheet in a steel-concrete composite wall, which is a novel composite structure composed of thin sheet steel outer skin filled with light weight concrete.
Journal ArticleDOI

Error estimates for the unilateral buckling load of a plate involving the membrane efforts consistency error

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors deal with error estimates for the unilateral buckling critical load of a thin plate in the presence of an obstacle, where the error on the membrane efforts tensor is taken into account.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Two-Dimensional Modelling of Compressive Failure in Delaminated Laminates

TL;DR: In this article, an analytical model is developed to assess the compressive strength criticality of near-surface interlaminar defects in laminated composites, where the growth conditions and growth behavior of this defect are studied by breaking the overall problem into an elastic stability problem and a fracture problem.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rectangular Plates Resting on Tensionless Elastic Foundation

TL;DR: In this paper, the behavior of elastic plates of rectangular shape on a tensionless Winkler foundation is analyzed by using an auxilliary function, and the displacement function of the plate is approximated by using the eigenfunctions of the completely free beam.
Journal ArticleDOI

Compressive Buckling of a Long Simply Supported Plate on an Elastic Foundation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors define a deflection function for a given width of a plate and a fraction of half-buckle wavelength representing the length of the region of the plate in which the foundation is compressed.
Related Papers (5)