This paper concerns the numerical and experimental characterization of the static and fatigue
strength of a flat stiffened panel, designed as a Fibre Metal Laminate (FML) and made of
aluminium alloy and Fibre Glass FRP. The panel is full scale and was tested under both static
and fatigue bi-axial loads, applied by means of an in house designed and built multiaxial
fatigue machine. The strain gauge outcomes from a preliminary static test are compared
with the corresponding numerical results, getting a satisfactory correlation. A crack propagation
in the FML is simulated by a two dimensional original approach based on the Dual
Boundary Element Method (DBEM). To overcome the lack of experimental information on
the size of delamination area an ‘‘inverse’’ procedure is applied: the delamination introduced
in the DBEM model is calibrated in such a way to minimise the numerical and experimental
growth rate differences.
This approach aims at providing a general purpose evaluation tool for a better understanding
of the fatigue resistance of FML panels, providing a deeper insight into the role
of fibre stiffness and of delamination extension on the Stress Intensity Factors. The experimental
test was realized in the context of a European research project (DIALFAST)
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