Abstract

The dynamic instability of laminated composite doubly curved panels with centrally located circular cutout, subjected to non-uniform compressive in-plane harmonic edge loading is investigated. The present work deals with the problem of the occurrence of combination resonances in contrast to simple resonances in parametrically excited antisymmetric angle-ply and symmetric cross-ply laminated composite doubly curved panels with central circular cutout. The method of multiple scales is used to obtain analytical expressions for the simple and combination resonance instability regions. It is shown that other cases of the combination resonance can be of major importance and yield a significantly enlarged instability region in comparison to the principal instability region. The effects of non-uniform edge loading, centrally located circular cutout, damping, number of layers, orthotropy, the static load factor and the width-to-thickness ratio on dynamic instability behavior of simply supported laminated composite doubly curved panels are studied. The results show that under localized edge loading, combination resonance instability zones are as important as simple resonance instability zones. The effects of damping show that there is a finite critical value of the dynamic load factor for each instability region below which doubly curved panels cannot become dynamically unstable. A central circular cutout has the destabilizing effect on the dynamic stability behavior of laminated composite doubly curved panels subjected to non-uniform edge loading. This example of simultaneous excitation of two modes, each oscillating steadily as its own natural frequency, may be of considerable interest in vibration testing of actual structures.

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