Abstract

AbstractExperimental and analytical studies were conducted to investigate the axial strength and failure modes of sandwich panels with glass fiber reinforced polymer (GFRP) skins and soft polyurethane core. A total of 45 specimens of 78×150 mm cross-section and of lengths Le varying from 500 to 2,400 mm [i.e., slenderness ratio (KLe∶r) of 15–70, where r is the radius of gyration] were tested concentrically using pin-ends (K=1). The effects of skin thickness and an internal GFRP rib on axial behavior were studied. The study first assessed the level of out-of-straightness and concluded that all specimens generally fall within an acceptable limit of span/1,000. A model based on sandwich panel theory, accounting for excessive shear deformations of the soft core, was used to predict axial strength at a wide range of KLe∶r and then used in a parametric study. It was shown that short panels with KLe∶r of 15–17 experienced local failure, outwards skin wrinkling in non-ribbed panels, or skin crushing in ribbed pa...

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