motan
Aerospace
- Sep 21, 2001
- 4
Hello,
I aam designing an assembly of all-aluminum honeycomb panels, for which I created an FE model based on 2-D representation (PCOMP/NASTRAN). The panels are mainly subjected to pressure loading. Given that each individual panel in the assembly is are attached to the surrounding panels by discrete connections (i.e. brackets or , in some cases, fasteners penetrating the edge, namely fastener axis is located in the mid plane of the panel), the core shear (YZ,XZ) tends to be quite high around such points which act as load attractors. I wonder if I can base my core shear margins on the stresses in the fringe plot at the hot spots represented by panel connectivity points. In such case, the panel would likely need rectangular inserts of higher density core at such locations. Since I do not have any previous experience with honeycombs, I would appreciate any feedback, possibly including a simplified way to assess core shear stress for panels supported at dicrete locations. N.B. No panel testing is scheduled. Thank you.
I aam designing an assembly of all-aluminum honeycomb panels, for which I created an FE model based on 2-D representation (PCOMP/NASTRAN). The panels are mainly subjected to pressure loading. Given that each individual panel in the assembly is are attached to the surrounding panels by discrete connections (i.e. brackets or , in some cases, fasteners penetrating the edge, namely fastener axis is located in the mid plane of the panel), the core shear (YZ,XZ) tends to be quite high around such points which act as load attractors. I wonder if I can base my core shear margins on the stresses in the fringe plot at the hot spots represented by panel connectivity points. In such case, the panel would likely need rectangular inserts of higher density core at such locations. Since I do not have any previous experience with honeycombs, I would appreciate any feedback, possibly including a simplified way to assess core shear stress for panels supported at dicrete locations. N.B. No panel testing is scheduled. Thank you.