Development of Meteorological Towers Using Advanced Composite Materials

The research program involved both numerical and experimental work. The numerical analysis was conducted to simulate the static and dynamic behaviour of the 81 m meteorological FRP guyed tower under wind and ice loading. The FRP tower consisted of 16 segments each made of 3 cells connected together...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Alshurafa, Sami
Other Authors: Polyzois, Dimos (Civil Engineering)
Published: 2012
Subjects:
FRP
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/8099
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.1993-80992014-03-29T03:44:45Z Development of Meteorological Towers Using Advanced Composite Materials Alshurafa, Sami Polyzois, Dimos (Civil Engineering) Svecova, Dagmar (Civil Engineering) Jayaraman, Raghavan (Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering) Madugula, Murty K. S. (Department of Civil Engineering, University of Windsor) FRP Tower Meteorological guycables composite ANSYS The research program involved both numerical and experimental work. The numerical analysis was conducted to simulate the static and dynamic behaviour of the 81 m meteorological FRP guyed tower under wind and ice loading. The FRP tower consisted of 16 segments each made of 3 cells connected together to form an equilateral triangle having equal sides of 450 mm. The segments were interconnected using internal sleeves. Various non-linear finite element models were developed to study a number of design parameters for the 81 m FRP tower such as, different laminates containing a variety of stacking sequences of laminate orientations with various thicknesses, different cable diameters, and appropriate guy cable spacing levels. The effect of pre-stressing the guy cables up to 10 % of their breaking strength was investigated. The effect of fibre volume fraction on the design of the FRP tower was also examined. Furthermore, an 8.6 m FRP tower segment was designed using the finite element analysis and subject to the same loading conditions experienced by the bottom section of the 81 m FRP tower. A modal analysis was carried out for both the 8.6 m FRP tower segment with and without a mass on the top as well as for the 81 m FRP guyed tower to evaluate the vibration performance of these towers. The experimental work involved extensive material testing to define the material properties for use in the analysis of the 81 m FRP tower. It also involved the design and fabrication of a special collapsible mandrel for fabricating the FRP cells for the 8.6 m tower segment. The 8.6 m tower was tested horizontally under static lateral loading to 80 % of its estimated failure load using a “whiffle tree” arrangement, in order to simulate a uniformly distributed wind loading. Later, the same FRP tower was erected in a vertical position and was tested with and without a mass on top under dynamic loading to obtain the natural frequencies. Lastly, a comparative study was conducted between two 81 m FRP towers having different fibre volume fractions and a steel tower having a circular cross section. 2012-07-04T16:59:02Z 2012-07-04T16:59:02Z 2012-07-04 http://hdl.handle.net/1993/8099
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic FRP
Tower
Meteorological
guycables
composite
ANSYS
spellingShingle FRP
Tower
Meteorological
guycables
composite
ANSYS
Alshurafa, Sami
Development of Meteorological Towers Using Advanced Composite Materials
description The research program involved both numerical and experimental work. The numerical analysis was conducted to simulate the static and dynamic behaviour of the 81 m meteorological FRP guyed tower under wind and ice loading. The FRP tower consisted of 16 segments each made of 3 cells connected together to form an equilateral triangle having equal sides of 450 mm. The segments were interconnected using internal sleeves. Various non-linear finite element models were developed to study a number of design parameters for the 81 m FRP tower such as, different laminates containing a variety of stacking sequences of laminate orientations with various thicknesses, different cable diameters, and appropriate guy cable spacing levels. The effect of pre-stressing the guy cables up to 10 % of their breaking strength was investigated. The effect of fibre volume fraction on the design of the FRP tower was also examined. Furthermore, an 8.6 m FRP tower segment was designed using the finite element analysis and subject to the same loading conditions experienced by the bottom section of the 81 m FRP tower. A modal analysis was carried out for both the 8.6 m FRP tower segment with and without a mass on the top as well as for the 81 m FRP guyed tower to evaluate the vibration performance of these towers. The experimental work involved extensive material testing to define the material properties for use in the analysis of the 81 m FRP tower. It also involved the design and fabrication of a special collapsible mandrel for fabricating the FRP cells for the 8.6 m tower segment. The 8.6 m tower was tested horizontally under static lateral loading to 80 % of its estimated failure load using a “whiffle tree” arrangement, in order to simulate a uniformly distributed wind loading. Later, the same FRP tower was erected in a vertical position and was tested with and without a mass on top under dynamic loading to obtain the natural frequencies. Lastly, a comparative study was conducted between two 81 m FRP towers having different fibre volume fractions and a steel tower having a circular cross section.
author2 Polyzois, Dimos (Civil Engineering)
author_facet Polyzois, Dimos (Civil Engineering)
Alshurafa, Sami
author Alshurafa, Sami
author_sort Alshurafa, Sami
title Development of Meteorological Towers Using Advanced Composite Materials
title_short Development of Meteorological Towers Using Advanced Composite Materials
title_full Development of Meteorological Towers Using Advanced Composite Materials
title_fullStr Development of Meteorological Towers Using Advanced Composite Materials
title_full_unstemmed Development of Meteorological Towers Using Advanced Composite Materials
title_sort development of meteorological towers using advanced composite materials
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/8099
work_keys_str_mv AT alshurafasami developmentofmeteorologicaltowersusingadvancedcompositematerials
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