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Nonlinear rigid-plastic analysis of stiffened plates under blast loads Schubak, Robert Brian
Abstract
The large ductile deformation response of stiffened plates subjected to blast loads is investigated and simplified methods of analysis of such response are developed. Simplification is derived from modelling stiffened plates as singly symmetric beams or as grillages thereof. These beams are further assumed to behave in a rigid, perfectly plastic manner and to have piecewise linear bending moment-axial force capacity interaction relations, otherwise known as yield curves. A blast loaded, one-way stiffened plate is modelled as a singly symmetric beam comprised of one stiffener and its tributary plating, and subjected to a uniformly distributed line load. For a stiffened plate having edges fully restrained against rotations and translations, both transverse and in-plane, use of the piecewise linear yield curve divides the response of the beam model into two distinct phases: an initial small displacement phase wherein the beam responds as a plastic hinge mechanism, and a final large displacement phase wherein the beam responds as a plastic string. If the line load is restricted to be a blast-type pulse, such response is governed by linear differential equations and so may be solved in closed form. Examples of a one-way stiffened plate subjected to various blast-type pulses demonstrate good agreement between the present rigid-plastic formulation and elastic-plastic beam finite element and finite strip solutions. The response of a one-way stiffened plate is alternatively analysed by approximating it as a sequence of instantaneous mode responses. An instantaneous mode is analogous to a normal mode of linear vibration, but because of system nonlinearity exists for only the instant and deformed configuration considered. The instantaneous mode shapes are determined by an extremum principle which maximizes the rate of change of the stiffened plate's kinetic energy. This approximate rigid-plastic response is not solved in closed form but rather by a semi-analytical time-stepping algorithm. Instantaneous mode solutions compare very well with the closed-form results. The instantaneous mode analysis is extended to the case of two-way stiffened plates, which are modelled by grillages of singly symmetric beams. For two examples of blast loaded two-way stiffened plates, instantaneous mode solutions are compared to results from super finite element analyses. In one of these examples the comparison between analyses is extremely good; in the other, although the magnitudes of displacement response differ between the analyses, the predicted durations and mechanisms of response are in agreement. Incomplete fixity of a stiffened plate's edges is accounted for in the beam and grillage models by way of rigid-plastic links connecting the beams to their rigid supports. Like the beams, these links are assumed to have piecewise linear yield curves, but with reduced bending moment and axial force capacities. The instantaneous mode solution is modified accordingly, and its results again compare well with those of beam finite element analyses. Modifications to the closed-form and instantaneous mode solutions to account for strain rate sensitivity of the panel material are presented. In the closed-form solution, such modification takes the form of an effective dynamic yield stress to be used throughout the rigid-plastic analysis. In the time-stepping instantaneous mode solution, a dynamic yield stress is calculated at each time step and used within that time step only. With these modifications in place, the responses of rate-sensitive one-way stiffened plates predicted by the present analyses once again compare well with finite element and finite strip solutions.
Item Metadata
Title |
Nonlinear rigid-plastic analysis of stiffened plates under blast loads
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Creator | |
Publisher |
University of British Columbia
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Date Issued |
1991
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Description |
The large ductile deformation response of stiffened plates subjected to blast loads is investigated and simplified methods of analysis of such response are developed. Simplification
is derived from modelling stiffened plates as singly symmetric beams or as grillages thereof. These beams are further assumed to behave in a rigid, perfectly plastic manner and to have piecewise linear bending moment-axial force capacity interaction relations, otherwise known as yield curves.
A blast loaded, one-way stiffened plate is modelled as a singly symmetric beam comprised
of one stiffener and its tributary plating, and subjected to a uniformly distributed line load. For a stiffened plate having edges fully restrained against rotations and translations,
both transverse and in-plane, use of the piecewise linear yield curve divides the response of the beam model into two distinct phases: an initial small displacement phase wherein the beam responds as a plastic hinge mechanism, and a final large displacement phase wherein the beam responds as a plastic string. If the line load is restricted to be a blast-type pulse, such response is governed by linear differential equations and so may be solved in closed form. Examples of a one-way stiffened plate subjected to various blast-type pulses demonstrate good agreement between the present rigid-plastic formulation and elastic-plastic beam finite element and finite strip solutions.
The response of a one-way stiffened plate is alternatively analysed by approximating it as a sequence of instantaneous mode responses. An instantaneous mode is analogous to a normal mode of linear vibration, but because of system nonlinearity exists for only the instant and deformed configuration considered. The instantaneous mode shapes are
determined by an extremum principle which maximizes the rate of change of the stiffened plate's kinetic energy. This approximate rigid-plastic response is not solved in closed form but rather by a semi-analytical time-stepping algorithm. Instantaneous mode solutions compare very well with the closed-form results.
The instantaneous mode analysis is extended to the case of two-way stiffened plates, which are modelled by grillages of singly symmetric beams. For two examples of blast loaded two-way stiffened plates, instantaneous mode solutions are compared to results from super finite element analyses. In one of these examples the comparison between analyses is extremely good; in the other, although the magnitudes of displacement response
differ between the analyses, the predicted durations and mechanisms of response are in agreement.
Incomplete fixity of a stiffened plate's edges is accounted for in the beam and grillage models by way of rigid-plastic links connecting the beams to their rigid supports. Like the beams, these links are assumed to have piecewise linear yield curves, but with reduced bending moment and axial force capacities. The instantaneous mode solution is modified accordingly, and its results again compare well with those of beam finite element analyses.
Modifications to the closed-form and instantaneous mode solutions to account for strain rate sensitivity of the panel material are presented. In the closed-form solution, such modification takes the form of an effective dynamic yield stress to be used throughout the rigid-plastic analysis. In the time-stepping instantaneous mode solution, a dynamic yield stress is calculated at each time step and used within that time step only. With these modifications in place, the responses of rate-sensitive one-way stiffened plates predicted by the present analyses once again compare well with finite element and finite strip solutions.
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Genre | |
Type | |
Language |
eng
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Date Available |
2011-02-18
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Provider |
Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library
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Rights |
For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use.
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DOI |
10.14288/1.0228846
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URI | |
Degree | |
Program | |
Affiliation | |
Degree Grantor |
University of British Columbia
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Campus | |
Scholarly Level |
Graduate
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Aggregated Source Repository |
DSpace
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For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use.