Bending Moment, Shear Force, Torsional Moment (M, M, V, V, M) The Member at The Design Load
1) The document discusses the structural design and analysis of load-carrying aircraft members like wings. It covers determining design loads, factors of safety, and interpreting failures from static tests.
2) Beam theory is commonly used to analyze statically indeterminate wing structures, making assumptions about strain variation. Buckling of skin and stringers can invalidate these assumptions.
3) Under increasing loads, the wing's cross-section members like skin, stringers and corner members initially share loads proportionally. Skin buckling transfers its load to the other members which resist further loading through column action until ultimate failure.
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Bending Moment, Shear Force, Torsional Moment (M, M, V, V, M) The Member at The Design Load
1) The document discusses the structural design and analysis of load-carrying aircraft members like wings. It covers determining design loads, factors of safety, and interpreting failures from static tests.
2) Beam theory is commonly used to analyze statically indeterminate wing structures, making assumptions about strain variation. Buckling of skin and stringers can invalidate these assumptions.
3) Under increasing loads, the wing's cross-section members like skin, stringers and corner members initially share loads proportionally. Skin buckling transfers its load to the other members which resist further loading through column action until ultimate failure.
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Structural design of a load carrying member
Load: bending moment, shear force, torsional
moment (M x , M z , V x , V z , M y ) Design: The member must fail at the design load
Design load = factor of safety X limit load Factory of safety = 1.5 Limit load = highest possible load expected during its entire service life
U.S. Department of Transportation FEDERAL AVIATION ADMINISTRATION
ADVISORY CIRCULAR
Subject: INTERPRETATION OF FAILURE STATIC STRUCTURAL TEST PROGRAMS
4.0 INTERPRETATION OF FAILURE
4.0 INTERPRETATION OF FAILURE.
In the interest of standardization and to eliminate the wide variety of requirements imposed on different applicants by the various Aircraft Certification Offices, the following definition should be used by all Aircraft Certification Offices to assess the acceptability of a failure for small airplanes in a structural static test to ultimate load:
A structural static failure has occurred when the article being tested cannot sustain an increase in load, or cannot sustain the required load for at least 3 seconds.
Local failures are allowable if occurrence is beyond limit load and if the article can reach and sustain ultimate load. The process of answering these questions is called design W f A19.3 Wing strength requirements:
Two major strength requirements must be satisfied in the structural design of a wing:
1) Under the limit loads, no part of the structure must be stressed beyond the yield strength of the material
2) The structure shall also carry design loads without rupture or collapse or in other words failure
The design load = 1.5 times the limit load
Aircraft factor of safety of 1.5 is rather low compared to other fields of structural design f
Safety of the airframe structure is the paramount design requirement
Therefore, the correctness of the theoretical design must be checked by extensive static and dynamic tests to verify whether the structure will carry the design loads without failure f A19.4 Wing stress analysis method:
In many previous chapters of this book, internal stresses were calculated for both statically determinate and statically indeterminate airframe structures
In a statically determinate structure, the internal stresses (loads) can be found by the use of static equilibrium equations alone
The overall structural arrangement of members is necessary, but the size and shape of members are not required
In other words, design consists of finding internal stresses and then selecting sizes and shapes of structural members to carry that stress safely and efficiently f
In a statically indeterminate structure, additional equations beyond the equations of static equilibrium are necessary to find the internal stresses
These additional equations are obtained from a consideration of structural deformations
This means that size, shape and material of the structural members must be known before the internal stresses can be determined f This fact means that a trial and error method is necessary for the stress analysis of a statically indeterminate structure
Another important fact to be remembered is that a statically determinate structure has just enough members to produce stability
If one member fails, the whole structure will fail
Whereas a statically indeterminate structure has one or more redundant members than are necessary for static stability
Thus in the event of failure of some members, the loads will get redistributed and the structure, as a whole, will not fail
The statically indeterminate structure is intrinsically a fail- safe structure
f In general, statically indeterminate structures can be made lighter and with smaller overall deflections
f Methods of stress analysis for statically indeterminate wing structure
Two general methods are commonly used
1) Flexural beam theory with simplifying assumptions
2) Solving for redundant forces and stresses by applying the principles of the elastic theory by various methods such as virtual work, strain energy etc
The second method is no doubt more accurate since less assumptions are necessary
However, this requires computing facility to solve a large number of simultaneous equations
f Stress analysis of thin-skin-multiple stringer cantilever wings
The most common type of wing construction is the multiple stringer type as shown here
Such a structure is statically indeterminate to many degrees w.r.t internal stresses
f Stress analysis of thin-skin-multiple stringer cantilever wings
Fortunately, structural tests of complete wing structure show that the simple beam theory gives stresses which check fairly well with measured stresses if:
1) the wing span is several times the wing chord 2) the sweep back is minor 3) the wing is free of major cut outs and discontinuities
Boeing wing testing video 777 Boeing wing testing video 787 f Assumptions-Beam Theory:
In this chapter the wing bending and shear stresses will be calculated using the unsymmetrical beam theory
The two main assumptions of beam theory are:
1) Transverse sections of the beam originally plane before bending remain plane after bending of the beam 2) The longitudinal stress distribution is directly proportional to strain and therefore, from assumption (1) is also linear. This assumption actually means that each longitudinal elements acts as if it were separate from every other element and that Hooks law holds, namely, that the stress-strain curve is linear
This assumption means that longitudinal strains vary directly as the distance from neutral axis or the strain variation in the cross section across the neutral axis is linear with distance from N.A c y = o y, Strain variation f 1) Transverse sections of the beam originally plane before bending remain plane after bending of the beam
c y = o y, Strain variation f
Assumption-1 Neglects the strain due to shear stresses in the longitudinal elements of the beam
This is commonly know as shear lag effect
Shear lag effects are not important except near major cut- outs or other major discontinuities and also near locations of large concentrated loads Deformation due to shear alone Deformation due to bending alone Deformation due to combined bending and shear P A A f 2) The longitudinal stress distribution is directly proportional to strain and therefore, from assumption (1) is also linear. This assumption actually means that each longitudinal element acts as if it were separate from every other element and that Hooks law holds, namely, that the stress-strain curve is linear
In the wing structure assumption (2) is usually not correct if elastic and inelastic buckling of skin and stringers occur before the failure of the wing
If buckling occurs prior to wing failure the errors in beam theory are corrected by the use of so-called effective area of cross-section which is discussed later f A19.9 Physical action of wing section in resisting external bending forces from zero to failing load
Fig A19.17 shows a common type of wing cross section structural arrangement generally referred to as the distributed flange type
The corner members (a) and (b) are considerably larger in area than the stringers (c)
The skin is relatively thin
Now assume that the wing is subjected to a gradually increasing bending moment which places the upper skin (upper portion of the cross section) in compression and bottom portion in tension
f Under small loading the compressive stresses on the skin of the top surface will be small and the stresses will be directly proportional to strain. i.e the stresses in the corner members a & b, stresses in the stringer (c) and stresses in the skin are all proportional to their respective strain values. Each one of them act independently to resist compressive stresses due to bending
f
The compressive bending stresses can be computed from the beam formula
where I x will include all the cross section area
x b x M Z I | | o = | \ . f As the external load is increased, the compressive stresses on the thin sheets start to buckle the sheet panels
After this buckling, the buckled skin looses rapidly its further compressive load carrying ability as the loading on the wing is increased
In the buckled skin, the stress is no longer proportional to strain
However, the inability of the buckled top skin to carry further load does not lead to wing failure as these additional loads are transferred to the stringer and corner members
Insert buckling of stiffened panel autocad f The stringers (c) are only supported transversely at wing rib stations and are braced against buckling by the skin on the top side
The stringers (c) resist the wing externally applied bending moment by developing compressive stresses through column action where the length of the column is the rib spacing
f As the wing loading increases further the stringers (c) suffer column buckling elastically
The buckled stringers (c) do not participate in sharing any additional compressive load as the wing loading is increased beyond this point
f
However, because of the support of the continuous skin the buckled stringers continue to carry the buckling load as the load is increased further These additional loads (which the buckled skin and the buckled stringer would have carried had they not buckled) are transferred to the corner members in addition to their normal share of loading
f
The corner members are braced on two sides; on the top by the skin and on the side by the web. They are also supported at the rib stations
Therefore, the corner flanges cannot suffer column buckling due to the two-sided support. If it bends perpendicular to the top skin, the web attachment on the side will prevent it and vice-versa
f The corner members eventually will fail by local crippling
f After crippling failure it cannot resist any additional load and the wing cross section fails by complete failure of its compressive side
Boeing 777 wing video f The bending moment at which the corner members in the compression side fail by crippling is the ultimate bending resistance of the beam section
How do we calculate this ultimate bending resistance of the beam section?