Dynamic Response of Fiber-Metal Laminates Sandwich Beams under Uniform Blast Loading.

Materials (Basel)

Basalt Fiber and Composite Key Laboratory of Sichuan Province, Dazhou 635000, China.

Published: September 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The paper investigates how fiber-metal laminate (FML) sandwich beams respond to uniform blast loading through theoretical and numerical studies.
  • It employs a modified rigid-plastic material model to derive analytical solutions for maximum deflection and response time, which are validated by finite element analysis using ABAQUS software.
  • The research highlights how factors like metal volume fraction and foam density impact the dynamic response, while also noting the need for a more detailed theoretical model to account for damage and material microstructure in future work.

Article Abstract

In this work, theoretical and numerical studies of the dynamic response of a fiber-metal laminate (FML) sandwich beam under uniform blast loading are conducted. On the basis of a modified rigid-plastic material model, the analytical solutions for the maximum deflection and the structural response time of FML sandwich beams with metal foam core are obtained. Finite element analysis is carried out by using ABAQUS software, and the numerical simulations corroborate the analytical predictions effectively. The study further examines the impact of the metal volume fraction, the metal strength factor between the metal layer and the composite material layer, the foam strength factor of the metal foam core to the composite material layer, and the foam density factor on the structural response. Findings reveal that these parameters influence the dynamic response of fiber-metal laminate (FML) sandwich beams to varying degrees. The developed analytical model demonstrates its capability to accurately forecast the dynamic behavior of fiber-metal laminate (FML) sandwich beams under uniform blast loading. The theoretical model in this article is a simplified model and cannot consider details such as damage, debonding, and the influence of layer angles in experiments. It is necessary to establish a refined theoretical model that can consider the microstructure and failure of composite materials in the future.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11433085PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma17184482DOI Listing

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