Abstract

The elastica behavior of an extensional sandwich panel with a “soft” core when subjected to in-plane compressive loads is presented and it is compared with the response of its extensional equivalent single layer (ESL) with shear deformations model. The field equations along with the appropriate boundary conditions for the sandwich and the ESL panels have been derived through a variational approach following the High-order SAndwich Panel Theory (HSAPT) approach that takes into account the vertical flexibility of the core. The governing equations include the effects of the extension of the mid-surfaces of the face sheets of the sandwich panel or the mid-plane of the ESL model which the classical elastica approach misses. The results of the elastica response of a clamped-simply-supported sandwich panel and its ESL counterpart are presented and compared. They include the response along the panel, deformed shapes and equilibrium curves of in-plane loads versus structural quantities such as displacements and internal stress resultants and stresses. These results reveal that the predicted buckling load of the ESL panel is larger than that of the sandwich panel and that deep in the non-linear range the upper face sheet wrinkles with increasing overall and edge displacements and a release of the load. Hence, the use of an equivalent single layer panel especially when a sandwich panel with a compliant core is considered may lead to unsafe and unreliable predictions when large displacements and large rotations are considered.

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