Mechanical property determination for flexible material systems

Inflatable Aerodynamic Decelerators (IADs) are a candidate technology NASA began investigating in the late 1960’s. Compared to supersonic parachutes, IADs represent a decelerator option capable of operating at higher Mach numbers and dynamic pressures. IADs have seen a resurgence in interest from...

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Main Author: Hill, Jeremy Lee
Other Authors: Braun, Robert D.
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/54993
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spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-549932016-06-15T03:39:06ZMechanical property determination for flexible material systemsHill, Jeremy LeeInflatable aerodynamic deceleratorFlexible material systemsFinite element analysisMulti-scale modelingParameter identificationInflatable Aerodynamic Decelerators (IADs) are a candidate technology NASA began investigating in the late 1960’s. Compared to supersonic parachutes, IADs represent a decelerator option capable of operating at higher Mach numbers and dynamic pressures. IADs have seen a resurgence in interest from the Entry, Descent, and Landing (EDL) community in recent years. The NASA Space Technology Roadmap (STR) highlights EDL systems, as well as, Materials, Structures, Mechanical Systems, and Manufacturing (MSMM) as key Technology Areas for development in the future; recognizing deployable decelerators, flexible material systems, and computational design of materials as essential disciplines for development. This investigation develops a multi-scale flexible material modeling approach that enables efficient high-fidelity IAD design and a critical understanding of the new materials required for robust and cost effective qualification methods. The approach combines understanding of the fabric architecture, analytical modeling, numerical simulations, and experimental data. This work identifies an efficient method that is as simple and as fast as possible for determining IAD material characteristics while not utilizing complicated or expensive research equipment. This investigation also recontextualizes an existing mesomechanical model through validation for structures pertaining to the analysis of IADs. In addition, corroboration and elaboration of this model is carried out by evaluating the effects of varying input parameters. Finally, the present investigation presents a novel method for numerically determining mechanical properties. A sub-scale section that captures the periodic pattern in the material (unit cell) is built. With the unit cell, various numerical tests are performed. The effective nonlinear mechanical stiffness matrix is obtained as a function of elemental strains through correlating the unit cell force-displacement results with a four node membrane element of the same size. Numerically determined properties are validated for relevant structures. Optical microscopy is used to capture the undeformed geometry of the individual yarns.Georgia Institute of TechnologyBraun, Robert D.2016-05-27T13:23:19Z2016-05-27T13:23:19Z2016-052016-04-12May 20162016-05-27T13:23:19ZDissertationapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/54993en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Inflatable aerodynamic decelerator
Flexible material systems
Finite element analysis
Multi-scale modeling
Parameter identification
spellingShingle Inflatable aerodynamic decelerator
Flexible material systems
Finite element analysis
Multi-scale modeling
Parameter identification
Hill, Jeremy Lee
Mechanical property determination for flexible material systems
description Inflatable Aerodynamic Decelerators (IADs) are a candidate technology NASA began investigating in the late 1960’s. Compared to supersonic parachutes, IADs represent a decelerator option capable of operating at higher Mach numbers and dynamic pressures. IADs have seen a resurgence in interest from the Entry, Descent, and Landing (EDL) community in recent years. The NASA Space Technology Roadmap (STR) highlights EDL systems, as well as, Materials, Structures, Mechanical Systems, and Manufacturing (MSMM) as key Technology Areas for development in the future; recognizing deployable decelerators, flexible material systems, and computational design of materials as essential disciplines for development. This investigation develops a multi-scale flexible material modeling approach that enables efficient high-fidelity IAD design and a critical understanding of the new materials required for robust and cost effective qualification methods. The approach combines understanding of the fabric architecture, analytical modeling, numerical simulations, and experimental data. This work identifies an efficient method that is as simple and as fast as possible for determining IAD material characteristics while not utilizing complicated or expensive research equipment. This investigation also recontextualizes an existing mesomechanical model through validation for structures pertaining to the analysis of IADs. In addition, corroboration and elaboration of this model is carried out by evaluating the effects of varying input parameters. Finally, the present investigation presents a novel method for numerically determining mechanical properties. A sub-scale section that captures the periodic pattern in the material (unit cell) is built. With the unit cell, various numerical tests are performed. The effective nonlinear mechanical stiffness matrix is obtained as a function of elemental strains through correlating the unit cell force-displacement results with a four node membrane element of the same size. Numerically determined properties are validated for relevant structures. Optical microscopy is used to capture the undeformed geometry of the individual yarns.
author2 Braun, Robert D.
author_facet Braun, Robert D.
Hill, Jeremy Lee
author Hill, Jeremy Lee
author_sort Hill, Jeremy Lee
title Mechanical property determination for flexible material systems
title_short Mechanical property determination for flexible material systems
title_full Mechanical property determination for flexible material systems
title_fullStr Mechanical property determination for flexible material systems
title_full_unstemmed Mechanical property determination for flexible material systems
title_sort mechanical property determination for flexible material systems
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/54993
work_keys_str_mv AT hilljeremylee mechanicalpropertydeterminationforflexiblematerialsystems
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