Structural Crashworthiness and Failure


Book Description

Failure in ductile material using finite element methods; modelling the process of failure in structures; criteria for the inelastic rupture of ductile metal beams subjected to large dynamic loads; strain localisation and fracture in metal sheets and thin walled structures; impact on metal tubes; indentation and perforation; composite strength and energy adsorption as an aspect of structural crash resistance; crash response of composite structures; dynamic compression of cellular structures and materials; elastic effects in the dynamic plastic response of structure; impact performance of aluminium structures, motorway impact attenuation devices: past, present and future; and grounding damage of ships.




Structural Crashworthiness and Failure


Book Description

This book contains twelve invited lectures from the Third International Symposium on Structural Crashworthiness. Particular emphasis is given to the failure predictions for ductile metal structures under large dynamic loads and to the behaviour of composite and cellular structures.




Structural Crashworthiness and Failure


Book Description

This book contains twelve invited lectures from the Third International Symposium on Structural Crashworthiness. Particular emphasis is given to the failure predictions for ductile metal structures under large dynamic loads and to the behaviour of composite and cellular structures.







Structural Crashworthiness


Book Description







Crashworthiness of Composite Thin-Walled Structures


Book Description

FROM THE INTRODUCTION Vehicle crashworthiness has been improving in recent years with attention mainly directed towards reducing the impact of the crash on the passengers. Effort has been spent in experimental research and in establishing safe theoretical design criteria on the mechanics of crumpling, providing to the engineers the ability to design vehicle structures so that the maximum amount of energy will dissipate while the material surrounding the passenger compartment is deformed, thus protecting the people inside. During the last decade the attention given to crashworthiness and crash energy management has been centered on composite structures. The main advantages of fibre reinforced composite materials over more conventional isotropic materials, are the very high specific strengths and specific stiffness which can be achieved. Moreover, with composites, the designer can vary the type of fibre, matrix and fibre orientation to produce composites with proved material properties. Besides the perspective of reduced weight, design flexibility and low fabrication costs, composite materials offer a considerable potential for lightweight energy absorbing structures; these facts attract the attention of the automotive and aircraft industry owing to the increased use of composite materials in various applications, such as frame rails used in the apron construction of a car body and the subfloor of an aircraft, replacing the conventional materials used. Our monograph is intended to provide an introduction to this relatively new topic of structural crashworthiness for professional engineers. It will introduce them to terms and concepts of it and acquaint them with some sources of literature about it. We believe that our survey constitutes a reasonably well-balanced synopsis of the topic.




International Symposium on Structural Crashworthiness and Failure (3rd) Held in Liverpool, United Kingdom on April 14 -16, 1993. Volume 13, Number 2. Special Issue


Book Description

Topics discussed at this symposium include the following: (1) Ship impacts: bow collisions; (2) New design-analysis techniques for blast loaded stiffened box and cylindrical shell structures; (3) Maximum strength of square thin-walled sections subjected to combined loading of torsion and bending; (4) Damage assessment of cylinders due to impact and explosive loading; (5) The crash response of circular tubes under general applied loading; (6) Dynamic response and failure of fully clamped circular plates under impulsive loading; (7) Deformation and rupture of blast loaded square plates-predictions and experiments; (8) Dynamic energy absorption characteristics of sandwich shells; (9) Residual tensile strength of ballistically damaged aluminum-based laminates; (10) High-speed impact response of particulate metal matrix composite materials- an experimental and theoretical investigation; (11) Dynamic response of the Space Station Freedom due to a module perforation by a hypervelocity impact; (12) The measurement of Mode I dynamic shear crack resistance in 50D structural steel using Double Cantilever Beam specimens; and (13) Ship-ramming after 1859.







International Symposium on Structural Crashworthiness and Failure (3rd) Held in Liverpool, United Kingdom on April 14-16, 1993. Volume 35, Number 3 and 4


Book Description

Topics discussed at this symposium include the following: (1) Application of kinematic models to compression and bending in simplified crash calculations; (2) Crash behavior of circular tubes with large side openings; (3) Closed-form solution for wedge cutting force through thin metal sheets; (4) Axial crushing of wood-filled square metal tubes; (5) The large-deflection pure bending properties of a square thin-walled tube; (6) Optimal bolt preload for dynamic loading; (7) A study of the crushing of tubes by two indenters; (8) Transmission of mechanical waves through laminated structures to evaluate interlamina bonds; (9) Rigid-plastic modelling of blast-loaded stiffened plates- Part I: one-way stiffened plates; (10) Rigid-plastic modelling of blast-loaded stiffened plates-Part II: partial end fixity rate effects and two-way stiffened plates; and (11) Theoretical analysis of tapered thin-walled metal inverbucktube.