Abstract

A study is made of the effects of variation in the lamination and geometric parameters of multilayered composite cylinders on the accuracy of the static and vibrational responses predicted by eight modeling approaches, based on two-dimensional shear-deformation shell theories. The standard of comparison is taken to be the exact three-dimensional elasticity solutions, and the quantities compared include both the gross response characteristics (e.g. vibration frequencies, strain energy components, average through-the-thickness displacements and rotations): and detailed, through-the-thickness. distributions of displacements, stresses and strain energy densities. Based on the numerical studies conducted, a predictor -corrector approach, used in conjunction with the first-order shear-deformation theory (with five displacement parameters in the predictor phase), appears to be the most effective among the eight modeling approaches considered. For multilayered orthotropic cylinders the response quantities obtained by the predictor corrector approach are shown to be in close agreement with the exact three-dimensional elasticity solutions for a wide range of lamination and geometric parameters. The potential of this approach for predicting the response of multilayered shells with complicated geometry is also discussed.

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