Abstract

Structural elements, such as stiffened panels and lap joints, are basic components of aircraft structures. For aircraft structural design, designers select predesigned elements satisfying the design load requirement based on their load-carrying capabilities. Therefore, estimation of safety envelope of structural elements for load tolerances would be a good investment for design purpose. In this article, a method of estimating safety envelope is presented using probabilistic classification, which can estimate a specific level of failure probability under both aleatory and epistemic uncertainties. An important contribution of this article is that the calculation uncertainty is reflected in building a safety envelope using Gaussian process, and the effect of element test data on reducing the calculation uncertainty is incorporated by updating the Gaussian process model with the element test data. It is shown that even one element test can significantly reduce the calculation uncertainty due to lacking knowledge of actual physics, so that conservativeness in a safety envelope is significantly reduced. The proposed approach was demonstrated with a cantilever beam example, which represents a structural element. The example shows that calculation uncertainty provides about 93% conservativeness against the uncertainty due to a few element tests. It is shown that even a single element test can increase the load tolerance modeled with the safety envelope by 20%.

Highlights

  • The conventional structural design strategy is to find the best geometric configuration, such as cross-sections, panel thickness, or dimensions, to satisfy safety requirements under known applied loads

  • We presented a method of estimating a safety envelope of structural element, which provides tolerance load satisfying the target probability for a given load combination

  • A cantilever structure is employed as a structural element to demonstrate the proposed method

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Summary

Introduction

The conventional structural design strategy is to find the best geometric configuration, such as cross-sections, panel thickness, or dimensions, to satisfy safety requirements under known applied loads. This article uses a probabilistic classification method to build a safety envelope, which is a PF function for given applied loads, based on failed and safe samples. Since dozens of coupons and a few element tests are often used, the estimated strength distribution has sampling error, and failure predictions have calculation errors.

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