Abstract

One of the main requirements in the design of structures made of functionally graded materials is their best response when used in an actual environment. This optimum behaviour may be achieved by searching for the optimal variation of the mechanical and physical properties along which the material compositionally grades. In the works available in the literature, the solution of such an optimization problem usually is obtained by searching for the values of the so called heterogeneity factors (characterizing the expression of the property variations) such that an objective function is minimized. Results, however, do not necessarily guarantee realistic structures and may give rise to unfeasible volume fractions if mapped into a micromechanical model. This paper is motivated by the confidence that a more intrinsic optimization problem should a priori consist in the search for the constituents’ volume fractions rather than tuning parameters for prefixed classes of property variations. Obtaining a solution for such a class of problem requires tools borrowed from dynamic optimization theory. More precisely, herein the so-called Pontryagin Minimum Principle is used, which leads to unexpected results in terms of the derivative of constituents’ volume fractions, regardless of the involved micromechanical model. In particular, along this line of investigation, the optimization problem for axisymmetric bodies subject to internal pressure and for which plane elasticity holds is formulated and analytically solved. The material is assumed to be functionally graded in the radial direction and the goal is to find the gradation that minimizes the maximum equivalent stress. A numerical example on internally pressurized functionally graded cylinders is also performed. The corresponding solution is found to perform better than volume fraction profiles commonly employed in the literature.

Highlights

  • In recent years, composite materials have been used in many applications in civil and mechanical engineering

  • The present paper addresses the problem of finding the optimal composition profile of the constituents for axisymmetric bodies subject to mechanical loadings and for which plane elasticity holds

  • Linear, sinusoidal and sigmoidal volume fraction profiles have been taken into account

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Summary

Introduction

Composite materials have been used in many applications in civil and mechanical engineering. In the design of these materials, control and optimization of stress and displacement fields are serious goals. A special class of composite materials, known as Functionally Graded Materials (FGMs), has been gaining considerable attention by researchers and engineers. In these materials, both the composition and the structure change (usually continuously) along specific directions, resulting in corresponding changes in the properties of the material. In the simplest FGMs, two different material constituents change gradually from one to the other. The most common material of this kind compositionally grades from a ceramic material to a metal one

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