Characteristic Wave Surfaces in Anisotropic Laminated Plates

1991 ◽  
Vol 113 (3) ◽  
pp. 279-285 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. R. Liu ◽  
J. Tani ◽  
T. Ohyoshi ◽  
K. Watanabe

A numerical method is used to determine the dispersion relation (an eigenvalue equation) of plane wave propagation in an anisotropic laminated plate. A phase velocity surface, phase slowness surface, phase wave surface, group velocity surface, group slowness surface, and group wave surface are defined and their formulae are deduced from the Rayleigh quotient and the orthogonality condition of the eigenvectors of the eigenvalue equation. The six characteristic surfaces can be used to illustrate the characteristics of plane waves and waves generated from a point source in an anisotropic laminated plate. As numerical examples, the characteristic surfaces are computed for graphite/epoxy angle ply laminated plates and for a hybrid one. The results for the graphite/epoxy laminated plates are compared with those obtained by Moon’s approximate theory.

Geophysics ◽  
1979 ◽  
Vol 44 (5) ◽  
pp. 987-990 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Helbig

Levin treats the subject concisely and exhaustively. Nevertheless, I feel a few comments to be indicated. My first point is rather general: of the three surfaces mentioned in the Appendix, the phase velocity surface (or normal surface) is easiest to calculate, since it is nothing but the graphical representation of the plane‐wave solutions for each direction. The wave surface has the greatest intuitive appeal, since it has the shape of the far‐field wavefront generated by an impulsive point source. The slowness surface, though apparently an insignificant transformation of the phase‐velocity surface, has the greatest significance for two reasons: (1) The projection of the slowness vector on a plane (the “component” of the slowness vector) is the apparent slowness, a quantity directly observed in seismic measurement. Continuity of wave‐fronts across an interface—the idea on which Snell’s law is based—is synonymous with continuity of apparent (or trace) slownesses; and (2) the slowness surface is the polar reciprocal of the wave surface; that is to say, not only has the radius vector of the slowness surface the direction of the normal to the wave surface (which follows from the definition of the two surfaces), but the inverse is also true. That is, the normal to the slowness surface has the direction of the corresponding ray (the radius vector of the wave surface). The fact that this surface so conveniently embodies all relevant information—direction of wave normal and ray, inverse phase velocity, inverse ray velocity (projection of the slowness vector on the ray direction), and the trace slowness along an interface—was the main reason for its introduction by Hamilton (1837) and McCullagh (1837). It is true that this information also can be obtained from the other surfaces, but only in a somewhat roundabout way, which can lead to serious complications. That only few of these complications are apparent in Levin’s article is a consequence of the fact that the polar reciprocal of a surface of second degree is another surface of second degree, in this case an ellipsoid. For more complicated and realistic types of anisotropy, one has to expect much more complicated surfaces. For transverse anisotropy, the slowness surface consists of one ellipsoid (SH‐waves) and a two‐leaved surface of fourth degree, the wave surface of an ellipsoid and a two‐leaved surface of degree 36. More general types of elastic anisotropy can lead to wave surfaces of up to degree 150, while the slowness surface is at most of degree six. It is, therefore, in the interest of a unified theory of wave propagation in anisotropic media to use, wherever possible, the slowness surface. The advantages of this are exemplified by Snell’s law in its general form. While it is impossible to base a concise formulation on the wave surface (reflected and refracted rays do not always lie in the plane containing the incident ray and the normal to the interface), the use of the slowness surface allows the following simple statement (Helbig 1965): “The slowness vectors of all waves in a reflection/refraction process have their end points on a common normal to the interface; the direction of the rays is parallel to the corresponding normals to the slowness surfaces”. A method to interpret refraction seismic data with an anisotropic overburden based on this form of Snell’s law has been described in Helbig (1964).


Author(s):  
T.C.T Ting

It is shown that certain anisotropic elastic materials can have one or two sheets of spherical slowness surface. The waves associated with a spherical slowness sheet can be longitudinal, transverse or neither. However, a longitudinal wave can propagate in any direction if and only if the slowness sheet is a sphere . The same cannot be said of transverse waves. A transverse wave can propagate in any direction without having a spherical slowness sheet. If a spherical slowness sheet exists, the waves need not be transverse. The existence of a spherical slowness sheet means that the associated velocity surface and the wave surface also have a sphere. Thus, one sheet of the wave front due to a point source is a sphere, a rather unusual phenomenon for anisotropic elastic materials. Particularly interesting anisotropic elastic materials are the ones in which one longitudinal and two transverse waves can propagate in any direction. They have one spherical slowness sheet for the longitudinal waves. In the special case, they have a second spherical slowness sheet which is disjoint from the spherical slowness sheet . The third slowness sheet is a spheroid.


Author(s):  
Litian Wang

Slowness surface for bulk wave propagation in anisotropic media can be divided into concave, saddle and convex regions by the parabolic lines. When a parabolic line crosses a symmetry plane, it leaves either an inflection point or a parabolic point. Surface normal at these points is associated with cuspidal point and swallowtail point, respectively, on the wave surface and in phonon focusing patterns. By examining the degeneracies in the Stroh eigenvalue equation, we have calculated the cuspidal points in cubic crystals analytically. In this work, the parabolic point and its surface normal are discussed. The main idea is to establish a connection between the parabolic point and the extraordinary transonic state that is related to a degeneracy with a multiplicity of four in the Stroh eigenvalue equation. Such a connection yields a series of simple expressions, which determine the locations of parabolic points and the corresponding swallowtail points. The result is demonstrated using phonon focusing patterns of cubic crystals, and the method also provides a tool for general discussion of the slowness surface geometry.


2017 ◽  
Vol 9 (6) ◽  
pp. 1485-1505
Author(s):  
Lingchang Meng ◽  
Fengming Li

AbstractThe nonlinear transverse vibrations of ordered and disordered two-dimensional (2D) two-span composite laminated plates are studied. Based on the von Karman's large deformation theory, the equations of motion of each-span composite laminated plate are formulated using Hamilton's principle, and the partial differential equations are discretized into nonlinear ordinary ones through the Galerkin's method. The primary resonance and 1/3 sub-harmonic resonance are investigated by using the method of multiple scales. The amplitude-frequency relations of the steady-state responses and their stability analyses in each kind of resonance are carried out. The effects of the disorder ratio and ply angle on the two different resonances are analyzed. From the numerical results, it can be concluded that disorder in the length of the two-span 2D composite laminated plate will cause the nonlinear vibration localization phenomenon, and with the increase of the disorder ratio, the vibration localization phenomenon will become more obvious. Moreover, the amplitude-frequency curves for both primary resonance and 1/3 sub-harmonic resonance obtained by the present analytical method are compared with those by the numerical integration, and satisfactory precision can be obtained for engineering applications and the results certify the correctness of the present approximately analytical solutions.


Author(s):  
Yu-Yang Chai ◽  
Feng-Ming Li ◽  
Zhi-Guang Song

AbstractThe nonlinear vibrations of composite laminated plates with time-dependent base excitation and boundary conditions are investigated. According to the von Kármán nonlinear plate theory, the dynamic equations of motion of the laminated plates are established. The nonlinear partial differential equations are transformed to the nonlinear ordinary differential ones using the Bubnov-Galerkin’s  method. The primary resonance and the primary parametric resonance of the laminated plate with time-dependent boundary conditions are investigated by means of the method of multiple scales. The validity of the present theoretical method is verified by comparing the amplitude–frequency relationship curves acquired from the present theoretical method with those calculated from the numerical simulation. The amplitude–frequency characteristic curves and the displacement time histories for different ply angles of the composite laminated plate are analyzed. The effects of the viscous damping factor and the transverse displacement excitation on the amplitude–frequency relationship curves are also studied. The present results are helpful for the nonlinear dynamical analysis and design of the composite laminated plate with time-dependent boundary conditions.


1987 ◽  
Vol 54 (1) ◽  
pp. 181-189 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Toledano ◽  
H. Murakami

In order to improve the accuracy of in-plane responses of shear deformable composite plate theories, a new laminated plate theory was developed for arbitrary laminate configurations based upon Reissner’s (1984) new mixed variational principle. To this end, across each individual layer, piecewise linear continuous displacements and quadratic transverse shear stress distributions were assumed. The accuracy of the present theory was examined by applying it to the cylindrical bending problem of laminated plates which had been solved exactly by Pagano (1969). A comparison with the exact solutions obtained for symmetric, antisymmetric, and arbitrary laminates indicates that the present theory accurately estimates in-plane responses, even for small span-to-thickness ratios.


2020 ◽  
Vol 224 (1) ◽  
pp. 449-467
Author(s):  
Shibo Xu ◽  
Alexey Stovas ◽  
Hitoshi Mikada ◽  
Junichi Takekawa

SUMMARY Triplicated traveltime curve has three arrivals at a given distance with the bowtie shape in the traveltime-offset curve. The existence of the triplication can cause a lot of problems such as several arrivals for the same wave type, anomalous amplitudes near caustics, anomalous behaviour of rays near caustics, which leads to the structure imaging deviation and redundant signal in the inversion of the model parameters. Hence, triplication prediction becomes necessary when the medium is known. The research of the triplication in transversely isotropic medium with a vertical symmetry axis (VTI) has been well investigated and it has become clear that, apart from the point singularity case, the triplicated traveltime only occurs for S wave. On contrary to the VTI case, the triplication behaviour in the orthorhombic (ORT) medium has not been well focused due to the model complexity. In this paper, we derive the second-order coefficients of the slowness surface for two S waves in the vicinity of three symmetry axes and define the elliptic form function to examine the existence of the on-axis triplication in ORT model. The existence of the on-axis triplication is found by the sign of the defined curvature coefficients. Three ORT models are defined in the numerical examples to analyse the behaviour of the on-axis triplication. The plots of the group velocity surface in the vicinity of three symmetry axes are shown for different ORT models where different shapes: convex or the saddle-shaped (concave along one direction and convex along with another) indicates the existence of the on-axis triplication. We also show the traveltime plots (associated with the group velocity surface) to illustrate the effect of the on-axis triplication.


1985 ◽  
Vol 107 (4) ◽  
pp. 375-377 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shen Zhong Han

A sandwich-type plate with metal facings and felt core, fastened by bolts, was studied using both test and finite-element analysis. This type of plate is cheap, light, damping-effective and without pollution; therefore, it is widely used in astronautical engineering. The tests were conducted for different felt thicknesses, bolt numbers, and fastening forces. The results show that the damping depends on friction between the plates and the felt. As compared with an identical stiffness solid plate, the damping of laminated plates can be increased up to 30 times. A mesh with rectangular elements was adopted in the finite-element analysis. In accordance with the slipping mechanism, a rectangular plate clamped on one edge was analyzed with the foregoing elements to determine the resonant frequency and the damping. The difference between the calculated and tested results was within 5 percent for the resonant frequency.


Perception ◽  
1991 ◽  
Vol 20 (6) ◽  
pp. 789-807 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Farley Norman ◽  
Joseph S Lappin ◽  
Steven W Zucker

In this study the sensitivity of human vision to the smoothness of stereoscopic surface structure was investigated. In experiments 1 and 2 random-dot stereograms were used to evaluate the discrimination of smooth versus ‘noisy’ sinusoidal surfaces differing in the percentages of points on a single smooth surface. Fully coherent smooth surfaces were found to be much more discriminable than other less smooth randomly perturbed surfaces. In experiment 3 the discrimination between discontinuous triangle-wave surfaces and similarly shaped smoothly curved surfaces obtained from the addition of the fundamental and the third harmonic of the corresponding triangle-wave surface was evaluated. The triangle-wave surfaces were found to be more accurately discriminated from the smoothly curved surfaces than would be predicted from the detectability of the difference in their Fourier power spectra. This superior discriminability was attributed to differences between the curvature and/or discontinuity of the two surfaces. In experiment 3 the effects of incoherent ‘noise’ points on the discrimination between the two surface types were also evaluated. These randomly positioned noise points had a relatively small effect on the discrimination between the two surfaces. In general, the results of these experiments indicate that smooth surfaces are salient for stereopsis and that isolated local violations of smoothness are highly discriminable.


2011 ◽  
Vol 138-139 ◽  
pp. 673-680
Author(s):  
Feng Xiang You ◽  
Fei Zhang ◽  
Buo Lei Zuo

The geometric parameters of the composite laminate in the engineering structure tend to have random properties. It is of great significance on how to study sensitivity of random parameters of laminated plates and carry on the optimized analysis to the parameteranalys when accurately estimating the reliability of structural design. According to the first order shear deformation theory, by using the spline finite element method, we can infer and the establish a laminated plate vibration equation, the stiffness matrix, mass matrix, proportional damping matrix, before making solution of the antisymmetric laminated plates response sensitivity formula, and analyzing the normal displacement, the sensitivity, the natural frequency of compound materials laminated plate. The Numerical examples verify the effectiveness of this algorithm.


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