Defect-controlled buckling of depressurized elastic shells (INVITED)


Abstract eng:
We revisit the classic problem of buckling of spherical elastic shells under pressure loading, with an emphasis on determining the role that engineered imperfections have on the critical buckling pressure. Since the 1960’s numerous theoretical and computational studies have addressed this canonical Mechanics problem, but there is a striking lack of precision experiments to corroborate these predictions. We perform an experimental investigation where thin shells of nearly uniform thickness are fabricated by the coating of hemispherical molds with a polymer solution, which upon curing yields the elastic structure. Moreover, our manufacturing technique allows us to introduce a single dimple-like defect with controllable geometric properties. By systematically varying the amplitude of this defect (smaller than the thickness of the shell) we study the effect that these imperfections have on the buckling strength of our spherical shells. Small deviations from the spherical geometry result in large reductions in the buckling pressure and our experimental results agree well with existing theories. We then perform a broader exploration for other classes of defects, for which theoretical predictions are yet to be developed.

Publisher:
International Union of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics, 2016
Conference Title:
Conference Title:
24th International Congress of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics
Conference Venue:
Montreal (CA)
Conference Dates:
2016-08-21 / 2016-08-26
Rights:
Text je chráněný podle autorského zákona č. 121/2000 Sb.



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 Record created 2016-11-15, last modified 2016-11-15


Original version of the author's contribution as presented on CD, page 2800, code TS.SM14-4.01 .:
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