1,728 research outputs found
An integrated approach to the optimum design of actively controlled composite wings
The importance of interactions among the various disciplines in airplane wing design has been recognized for quite some time. With the introduction of high gain, high authority control systems and the design of thin, flexible, lightweight composite wings, the integrated treatment of control systems, flight mechanics and dynamic aeroelasticity became a necessity. A research program is underway now aimed at extending structural synthesis concepts and methods to the integrated synthesis of lifting surfaces, spanning the disciplines of structures, aerodynamics and control for both analysis and design. Mathematical modeling techniques are carefully selected to be accurate enough for preliminary design purposes of the complicated, built-up lifting surfaces of real aircraft with their multiple design criteria and tight constraints. The presentation opens with some observations on the multidisciplinary nature of wing design. A brief review of some available state of the art practical wing optimization programs and a brief review of current research effort in the field serve to illuminate the motivation and support the direction taken in our research. The goals of this research effort are presented, followed by a description of the analysis and behavior sensitivity techniques used. The presentation concludes with a status report and some forecast of upcoming progress
The 1/r singularity in weakly nonlinear fracture mechanics
Material failure by crack propagation essentially involves a concentration of
large displacement-gradients near a crack's tip, even at scales where no
irreversible deformation and energy dissipation occurs. This physical situation
provides the motivation for a systematic gradient expansion of general
nonlinear elastic constitutive laws that goes beyond the first order
displacement-gradient expansion that is the basis for linear elastic fracture
mechanics (LEFM). A weakly nonlinear fracture mechanics theory was recently
developed by considering displacement-gradients up to second order. The theory
predicts that, at scales within a dynamic lengthscale from a crack's
tip, significant displacements and displacement-gradient
contributions arise. Whereas in LEFM the singularity generates an
unbalanced force and must be discarded, we show that this singularity not only
exists but is {\em necessary} in the weakly nonlinear theory. The theory
generates no spurious forces and is consistent with the notion of the autonomy
of the near-tip nonlinear region. The J-integral in the weakly nonlinear theory
is also shown to be path-independent, taking the same value as the linear
elastic J-integral. Thus, the weakly nonlinear theory retains the key tenets of
fracture mechanics, while providing excellent quantitative agreement with
measurements near the tip of single propagating cracks. As is consistent
with lengthscales that appear in crack tip instabilities, we suggest that this
theory may serve as a promising starting point for resolving open questions in
fracture dynamics.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figure
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