FAILURE PERFORMANCE OF BEND-FREE VARIABLE STIFFNESS COMPOSITE PRESSURE VESSELS

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
SHAHRZAD DAGHIGHI ◽  
PAUL M. WEAVER

Pressure vessels are designed to store liquids and gases and have various applications spanning from chemical plants to automotive and aerospace industries. Currently, lightweight composite pressure vessels are desirable, especially in transportation industry applications because of their subsequent benefits in fuel consumption, cost and environmental issues. Using composite materials for pressure vessels along with advanced manufacturing technologies such as automated fiber placement provides excellent scope to tailor stiffness through the structural surface using fiber steering to achieve desirable structural performance. Recently, variable angle tow (VAT) technology has been used to suppress bending in super ellipsoids of revolution composite pressure vessels, resulting in minimizing the inefficient bending stresses and deformations and increasing their load-carrying capacity. It is worth noting that such geometries can provide excellent packing efficiency. These advantages make the bend-free super ellipsoids of revolution composite pressure vessels potential candidates for the next generation of pressure vessels. Therefore, their failure performance as the most important design factor should be studied carefully due to safety reasons. In this study, the maximum allowable internal pressure for VAT bend-free ellipsoidal pressure vessels, using the first-ply failure based on both Tsai-Wu and three-dimensional invariant-based failure criteria is determined. Subsequently, VAT bend-free pressure vessels’ failure performance is compared against that obtained for conventional constant stiffness composite vessels. Among structures considered, the VAT bend-free composite vessel has the best failure performance. Moreover, the predicted failure load using the three-dimensional invariant-based failure criterion for the VAT bend-free design is 34% lower than the failure load predicted by the Tsai- Wu. Finally, the effect of various material properties on the difference in predicted failure load using these criteria is assessed. Results provide physical insight useful for designers in materials selection.

Author(s):  
J. Sakai ◽  
Y. H. Park

Abstract Anisotropic composite cylinders and pressure vessels have been widely employed in automotive, aerospace, chemical and other engineering areas due to high strength/stiffness-to-weight ratio, exceptional corrosion resistance, and superb thermal performance. Pipes, fuel tanks, chemical containers, rocket motor cases and aircraft and ship elements are a few examples of structural application of fiber reinforced composites (FRCs) for pressure vessels/pipes. Since the performance of composite materials replies on the tensile and compressive strengths of the fiber directions, the optimum design of composite laminates with varying fiber orientations is desired to minimize the damage of the structure. In this study, a complete mathematical 3D elasticity solution was developed, which can accurately compute stresses of a thick multilayered anisotropic fiber reinforced pressure vessel under force and pressure loadings. A rotational variable is introduced in the formalism to treat torsional loading in addition to force and pressure loadings. Then, the three-dimensional Tsai-Wu criterion is used based on the analytical solution to predict the failure. Finally, a global optimization algorithm is used to find the optimum fiber orientation and their best combination through the thickness direction.


Author(s):  
Goldin Priscilla C P ◽  
Selwin Rajadurai J

Metallic and metal-lined polymer composite pressure vessels are extensively used in industries including aerospace. In the absence of unique failure criteria for the structural elements, phenomenological or empirical methodologies always fascinate the researchers. This paper deals with comprehensive methodologies in the prediction of burst pressure of metallic and metal-lined polymer composite pressure vessels for aerospace applications. Metallic pressure vessels are analyzed using Ansys software considering the elastic-plastic nature of materials. The progressive analysis is carried out in metal-lined composite pressure vessels in an explicit mode using Ansys software. The problem of solution convergence is discussed in detail. The extent of degradation in static analysis is suggested after multiple analysis trials. In the unit pressure extrapolation technique, stress components are evaluated using Ansys software, transformed into the local coordinate system and hence failure pressure of the first ply is identified by maximum stress criterion. Then the analysis is continued with degrading of failed layers using Ansys software and successive failures of layers are identified in steps. The results of burst pressure, evaluated through the present analyses show good agreement with the published test results. The procedures described in the paper would be of interest to the designers of pressure vessels.


2009 ◽  
Vol 89 (1) ◽  
pp. 159-166 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aziz Onder ◽  
Onur Sayman ◽  
Tolga Dogan ◽  
Necmettin Tarakcioglu

Author(s):  
R. M. J. Groh ◽  
P. M. Weaver

The safe design of primary load-bearing structures requires accurate prediction of stresses, especially in the vicinity of geometric discontinuities where deleterious three-dimensional stress fields can be induced. Even for thin-walled structures significant through-thickness stresses arise at edges and boundaries, and this is especially precarious for laminates of advanced fibre-reinforced composites because through-thickness stresses are the predominant drivers in delamination failure. Here, we use a higher-order equivalent single-layer model derived from the Hellinger–Reissner mixed variational principle to examine boundary layer effects in laminated plates comprising constant-stiffness and variable-stiffness laminae and deforming statically in cylindrical bending. The results show that zigzag deformations, which arise due to layerwise differences in the transverse shear moduli, drive boundary layers towards clamped edges and are therefore critically important in quantifying localized stress gradients. The relative significance of the boundary layer scales with the degree of layerwise anisotropy and the thickness to characteristic length ratio. Finally, we demonstrate that the phenomenon of alternating positive and negative transverse shearing deformation through the thickness of composite laminates, previously only observed at clamped boundaries, can also occur at other locations as a result of smoothly varying the material properties over the in-plane dimensions of the laminate.


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