Fibre-reinforced composites are being increasingly used as alternatives for conventional materials primarily because of their high strength, specific stiffness, light weight and adjustable properties. However, before using this type of material with confidence in industrial applications such as marine, automotive or aerospace structural components, a thorough characterization of the constituent material properties is needed. Because of the number and the inherent variability of the constitutive properties of composite materials, the experimental characterization is quite cumbersome and requires a large number of specimens to be tested. An elegant way to circumvent this lack consists in using mixed numerical-experimental methods which constitute powerful tools for estimating unknown constitutive coefficients in a numerical model of a composite structure from static and/or dynamic experimental data collected on the real structure. Starting from the measurement of quantities such as the natural frequencies and mode shapes, these methods allow, by comparing numerical and experimental observations, the progressive refinement of the estimated material properties in the corresponding numerical model. In this domain, dynamic mixed techniques have gained in importance owing to their simplicity and efficiency. In this work, a new mixed numerical-experimental identification method based on the modal response of thick laminated shells is presented. This technique is founded on the minimisation of the discrepancies between the eigenvalues and eigenmodes computed with a highly accurate composite shell finite element model with adjustable elastic properties and the corresponding experimental quantities. In the case of thick shells, the constitutive parameters that can be identified are the two in-plane Young's moduli E1 and E2, the in-plane Poisson's ratio ν12 and the in-plane and transverse shear moduli G12, G13 and G23. To determine these six parameters, a typical set of 10 to 15 measured eigenfrequencies and eigenmodes is selected, and the over-constrained optimisation problem is solved with a nonlinear least squares algorithm. In order to maximize the quality of the identification, free-free boundary conditions and a non-contacting modal measurement method are chosen for the experimental determination of the eigenparameters. To obtain optimal experimental conditions, the specimens are suspended by thin nylon yarns and excited by a calibrated acoustic source (loudspeakers) while the dynamic response is measured with a scanning laser vibrometer. The measured frequency response functions are then treated in a modal curve fitting software to obtain a high quality set of modal data (mode shapes and frequencies). As the accuracy of this inverse method directly depends on the precision of the finite element model, a family of very efficient thick laminated shell finite elements based on a variable p-order approximation of the through-the-thickness displacement wit
Manon Eugénie Voisin--Leprince
Thomas Keller, Tara Habibi, Landolf-Giosef-Anastasios Rhode-Barbarigos