Buckling, Flutter, and Postbuckling Optimization of Composite Structures
This research work deals with the design and optimization of a large composite structure. In design of large structural systems, it is customary to divide the problem into many smaller independent/semi-independent local design problems. For example, the wing structure design problem is decomposed in...
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Virginia Tech
2014
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Postbuckling Flutter Discrete Optimization Genetic Algorithms Global/Local Methodology Composites Buckling Blending |
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Postbuckling Flutter Discrete Optimization Genetic Algorithms Global/Local Methodology Composites Buckling Blending Seresta, Omprakash Buckling, Flutter, and Postbuckling Optimization of Composite Structures |
description |
This research work deals with the design and optimization of a large composite structure. In
design of large structural systems, it is customary to divide the problem into many smaller
independent/semi-independent local design problems. For example, the wing structure design
problem is decomposed into several local panel design problem. The use of composite
necessitates the inclusion of ply angles as design variables. These design variables are discrete
in nature because of manufacturing constraint. The multilevel approach results into
a nonblended solution with no continuity of laminate layups across the panels. The nonblended
solution is not desirable because of two reasons. First, the structural integrity of
the whole system is questionable. Second, even if there is continuity to some extent, the
manufacturing process ends up being costlier.
In this work, we develop a global local design methodology to design blended composite
laminates across the whole structural system. The blending constraint is imposed via a guide
based approach within the genetic algorithm optimization scheme. Two different blending
schemes are investigated, outer and inner blending. The global local approach is implemented
for a complex composite wing structure design problem, which is known to have a strong
global local coupling. To reduce the computational cost, the originally proposed local one
dimensional search is replaced by an intuitive local improvement operator. The local panels
design problem arises in global/local wing structure design has a straight edge boundary
condition. A postbuckling analysis module is developed for such panels with applied edge
displacements. A parametric study of the effects of flexural and inplane stiffnesses on the
design of composite laminates for optimal postbuckling performance is done. The design
optimization of composite laminates for postbuckling strength is properly formulated with
stacking sequence as design variables.
Next, we formulate the stacking sequence design (fiber orientation angle of the layers) of
laminated composite flat panels for maximum supersonic flutter speed and maximum thermal
buckling capacity. The design is constrained so that the behavior of the panel in the vicinity
of the flutter boundary should be limited to stable limit cycle oscillation. A parametric study
is carried out to investigate the tradeoff between designs for thermal buckling and flutter.
In an effort to include the postbuckling constraint into the multilevel design optimization
of large composite structure, an alternative cheap methodology for predicting load paths
in postbuckled structure is presented. This approach being computationally less expensive
compared to full scale nonlinear analysis can be used in conjunction with an optimizer for
preliminary design of large composite structure with postbuckling constraint. This approach
assumes that the postbuckled stiffness of the structure, though reduced considerably, remains
linear. The analytical expressions for postbuckled stiffness are given in a form that can
be used with any commercially available linear finite element solver. Using the developed
approximate load path prediction scheme, a global local design approach is developed to
design large composite structure with blending and local postbuckling constraints. The
methodology is demonstrated via a composite wing box design with blended laminates. === Ph. D. |
author2 |
Aerospace and Ocean Engineering |
author_facet |
Aerospace and Ocean Engineering Seresta, Omprakash |
author |
Seresta, Omprakash |
author_sort |
Seresta, Omprakash |
title |
Buckling, Flutter, and Postbuckling Optimization of Composite Structures |
title_short |
Buckling, Flutter, and Postbuckling Optimization of Composite Structures |
title_full |
Buckling, Flutter, and Postbuckling Optimization of Composite Structures |
title_fullStr |
Buckling, Flutter, and Postbuckling Optimization of Composite Structures |
title_full_unstemmed |
Buckling, Flutter, and Postbuckling Optimization of Composite Structures |
title_sort |
buckling, flutter, and postbuckling optimization of composite structures |
publisher |
Virginia Tech |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10919/26401 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-03092007-132508/ |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT serestaomprakash bucklingflutterandpostbucklingoptimizationofcompositestructures |
_version_ |
1719340537933201408 |
spelling |
ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-264012020-09-26T05:30:59Z Buckling, Flutter, and Postbuckling Optimization of Composite Structures Seresta, Omprakash Aerospace and Ocean Engineering Gürdal, Zafer Patil, Mayuresh J. Hyer, Michael W. Lindner, Douglas K. Librescu, Liviu Postbuckling Flutter Discrete Optimization Genetic Algorithms Global/Local Methodology Composites Buckling Blending This research work deals with the design and optimization of a large composite structure. In design of large structural systems, it is customary to divide the problem into many smaller independent/semi-independent local design problems. For example, the wing structure design problem is decomposed into several local panel design problem. The use of composite necessitates the inclusion of ply angles as design variables. These design variables are discrete in nature because of manufacturing constraint. The multilevel approach results into a nonblended solution with no continuity of laminate layups across the panels. The nonblended solution is not desirable because of two reasons. First, the structural integrity of the whole system is questionable. Second, even if there is continuity to some extent, the manufacturing process ends up being costlier. In this work, we develop a global local design methodology to design blended composite laminates across the whole structural system. The blending constraint is imposed via a guide based approach within the genetic algorithm optimization scheme. Two different blending schemes are investigated, outer and inner blending. The global local approach is implemented for a complex composite wing structure design problem, which is known to have a strong global local coupling. To reduce the computational cost, the originally proposed local one dimensional search is replaced by an intuitive local improvement operator. The local panels design problem arises in global/local wing structure design has a straight edge boundary condition. A postbuckling analysis module is developed for such panels with applied edge displacements. A parametric study of the effects of flexural and inplane stiffnesses on the design of composite laminates for optimal postbuckling performance is done. The design optimization of composite laminates for postbuckling strength is properly formulated with stacking sequence as design variables. Next, we formulate the stacking sequence design (fiber orientation angle of the layers) of laminated composite flat panels for maximum supersonic flutter speed and maximum thermal buckling capacity. The design is constrained so that the behavior of the panel in the vicinity of the flutter boundary should be limited to stable limit cycle oscillation. A parametric study is carried out to investigate the tradeoff between designs for thermal buckling and flutter. In an effort to include the postbuckling constraint into the multilevel design optimization of large composite structure, an alternative cheap methodology for predicting load paths in postbuckled structure is presented. This approach being computationally less expensive compared to full scale nonlinear analysis can be used in conjunction with an optimizer for preliminary design of large composite structure with postbuckling constraint. This approach assumes that the postbuckled stiffness of the structure, though reduced considerably, remains linear. The analytical expressions for postbuckled stiffness are given in a form that can be used with any commercially available linear finite element solver. Using the developed approximate load path prediction scheme, a global local design approach is developed to design large composite structure with blending and local postbuckling constraints. The methodology is demonstrated via a composite wing box design with blended laminates. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T20:08:06Z 2014-03-14T20:08:06Z 2007-02-27 2007-03-09 2009-03-27 2007-03-27 Dissertation etd-03092007-132508 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/26401 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-03092007-132508/ dissertation_Seresta.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech |