Abstract
An investigation was performed to study the buckling and postbuckling behavior of sandwich beams containing lengthwise and depthwise through-the-width delaminations. An analytical beam model was developed to predict the buckling load of the beam and to describe its postbuckling response for arbitrarily situated delaminations and various combinations of boundary conditions. Griffith's energy release rate model was employed to predict the stability of delamination propagation under external loading and to determine the direction of delamination growth. Parametric studies over a wide range of beam geometries, damage sizes and locations, composite facings and beam boundary conditions were carried out to study their effects on the overall behavior of the sandwich structure, as well as its damage tolerance. The results demonstrated that a sandwich construction is very ‘sensitive’ to the presence of delaminations situated at the core-faceplate interface. Premature buckling failure occurs at external loads which are significantly lower than the buckling load for a ‘perfect’ sandwich beam; in ‘imperfect’ beams with composite faceplates, the layup sequence affects significantly the load-carrying capacity of the beam; varying either the boundary conditions in a sandwich beam or the lengthwise location of a delamination has a small effect on the postbuckling behavior of the beam. Delaminations located within composite faceplates have less pronounced influence, and as the defect is moved outwards the limit load may reach the buckling load corresponding to that of the ‘perfect’ beam. The proposed model is capable of analyzing the postbuckling behavior of both sandwich and composite laminated beams for arbitrary locations of the delamination, and various combinations of boundary conditions.
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