Abstract

Hygrothermal stresses due to the change in environmental condition may induce buckling and dynamic instability in the composite shell structures. In the present investigation, the hygrothermoelastic buckling behavior of laminated composite shells are numerically simulated using geometrically nonlinear finite element method. The orthogonal curvilinear coordinate is used for modeling a general doubly curved deep or shallow shell surface. The geometrically nonlinear finite element formulation is based on general nonlinear strain–displacement relations in the orthogonal curvilinear coordinate system. The present theory can be applicable to thin and moderately thick shells. The mechanical linear and nonlinear stiffnesses, and the nonmechanical nonlinear geometric stiffness matrices and the hygrothermal load vector are presented. It is also observed that during the present numerical solution of nonlinear equilibrium equation, in order to construct the nonlinear stiffness matrices for the first load step, the initial deformation can be assumed as zero or any computer generated small random number or the properly scaled fundamental buckling mode shape. To verify the present formulations and finite element code, the present results are compared well with those available in the open literature. Parametric studies such as thickness ratio and shallowness ratio on buckling are performed for spherical, truncated conical and cylindrical composite shell panels. The buckling behavior and deflection shapes are characterized by multiple wrinkles along unreinforced direction at higher moisture concentrations or temperature rise.

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