Abstract:
Elastic coupling is a unique phenomenon exhibited by anisotropic beams. Due to this
elastic coupling, different modes of beam deformation, such as extension, bending, and
twisting, interact with each other. Modern structures are utilizing this elastic coupling to
control them passively. The rotor blade of a wind turbine is one of the most well-known
examples, where the bend-twist coupling is being implemented to passively control
the angle of attack according to the wind load. This phenomenon of elastic coupling
is mainly studied in laminated composite beams, which are generally anisotropic and
inhomogeneous. There is a lack of research on elastic coupling in anisotropic-homogeneous
beams. In addition, the work that is currently available is based on specific assumptions
or has been solved for simplified loading cases.
This thesis work investigates the elastic coupling within both anisotropic-homogeneous
and anisotropic-inhomogeneous beams. The Variational Asymptotic Method (VAM)
has been employed as a mathematical tool, facilitating the simplification of the beam
problem. It systematically decomposes the 3D elasticity beam problem into a 2D
linear cross-sectional analysis and a 1D non-linear analysis along the beam length.
VAM employs the small parameters associated with the beam problem to perform this
decomposition, avoiding ad-hoc assumptions. These small parameters are utilized to
order the strain energy terms. The procedure begins by considering the dominant terms
f
irst, then systematically includes lesser dominant terms in higher-order solutions.
The analysis of anisotropic-homogeneous beams has been carried out by considering a
prismatic beam with solid elliptical cross-section. The study is divided into two parts
based on solution characteristics. The first part addresses orthotropic beams, offering
solutions for both the Classical and Timoshenko-like beam models. The second part
extends the analysis to monoclinic and complete anisotropic beams, providing solutions
exclusively for the Classical beam model. For both cases, closed-form expressions for 1D
strain measures and displacement fields have been derived, facilitating the recovery of 3D
displacement, stress, and strain fields. Notably, it is observed that beams with material
anisotropy up to orthotropy do not exhibit elastic coupling phenomena; this phenomenon
is first observed in monoclinic material beams and subsequently in complete anisotropic
material beams. Furthermore, it is noted that even in complete anisotropic-homogeneous
material beams, a fully elastically coupled system is not achieved; instead, only bend-twist
coupling is observed. Additionally, the analysis reveals a violation of the plane stress
condition in all coupled cases. To validate the results, comparisons have been made with
Finite Element Analysis (FEA) and existing literature results, demonstrating a high level
of agreement.
The analysis of anisotropic-inhomogeneous beam has been carried out using a laminated
composite strip-like beam. These laminated composite structures provide the most
feasible way to model this type of beam. This analysis is divided into two parts. The
f
irst part deals with the hygrothermal instabilities of these structures. Hygrothermal
stability conditions have been derived using Classical Laminated Plate Theory (CLPT).
These conditions have been used to propose the generalized hygrothermally stable
stacking sequences with different modes of elastic coupling. Furthermore, these stacking
sequences have been optimized to achieve maximum coupling response. The optimized
results are compared with conventional numerically optimized results. Additionally,
both results are checked for robustness against small perturbations in the optimized
results. The comparison shows that the proposed hygrothermally stable stacking sequence
provides better results as the number of plies increases. Both stacking sequences show
almost similar error distribution in the sensitivity analysis. The second part involves
a mathematical analysis of these beams using VAM. Here, nonlinear kinematics for
the strip-like beam are presented. The 2D shell membrane and curvature terms are
derived from the 3D strain field, enabling the expression of 2D shell parameters in
terms of 1D beam parameters. These newly defined 2D shell parameters are utilized
to compute the 2D strain energy density functional. The zeroth-order approximate
solution is obtained by minimizing the strain energy corrected up to O(Eε2) through
the variational principle. This process ultimately yields the linear constitutive relation
governing the linear coupling behavior of these beams. To capture nonlinear coupling
behavior, the first-order approximate solution is employed. The hygrothermal stability
of these structures is verified through FE simulations, using previously optimized
hygrothermally stable stacking sequences. The simulation results confirm hygrothermal
stability and comparison with FEA results shows a close agreement in the coupling results.