Elastodynamic crack problems in an orthotropic medium through complex variable approach

1992 ◽  
Vol 43 (6) ◽  
pp. 895-909 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. De ◽  
B. Patra
Author(s):  
Li Wang ◽  
Boris Diskin ◽  
Leonard V. Lopes ◽  
Eric J. Nielsen ◽  
Elizabeth Lee-Rausch ◽  
...  

A high-fidelity multidisciplinary analysis and gradient-based optimization tool for rotorcraft aero-acoustics is presented. Tightly coupled discipline models include physics-based computational fluid dynamics, rotorcraft comprehensive analysis, and noise prediction and propagation. A discretely consistent adjoint methodology accounts for sensitivities of unsteady flows and unstructured, dynamically deforming, overset grids. The sensitivities of structural responses to blade aerodynamic loads are computed using a complex-variable approach. Sensitivities of acoustic metrics are computed by chain-rule differentiation. Interfaces are developed for interactions between the discipline models for rotorcraft aeroacoustic analysis and the integrated sensitivity analysis. The multidisciplinary sensitivity analysis is verified through a complex-variable approach. To verify functionality of the multidisciplinary analysis and optimization tool, an optimization problem for a 40% Mach-scaled HART-II rotor-and-fuselage configuration is crafted with the objective of reducing thickness noise subject to aerodynamic and geometric constraints. The optimized configuration achieves a noticeable noise reduction, satisfies all required constraints, and produces thinner blades as expected. Computational cost of the optimization cycle is assessed in a high-performance computing environment and found to be acceptable for design of rotorcraft in general level-flight conditions.


1965 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
pp. 59-66 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Greif ◽  
J. L. Sanders

An infinite stringer is assumed to be continuously attached to a sheet along a line perpendicular to a finite crack. At a great distance from the crack, the sheet is under a uniform tensile stress parallel to the stringer. The plane-stress solution for this problem is carried out by using the complex variable approach of Muskhelishvili to derive an integral equation which is then solved numerically on the IBM 7090 computer. In particular, the effect of the stringer on the strength of the stress singularity at the crack tip, and the maximum load-concentration factor in the stringer are found.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hongfen Gao ◽  
Gaofeng Wei

This paper describes the application of the complex variable meshless manifold method (CVMMM) to stress intensity factor analyses of structures containing interface cracks between dissimilar materials. A discontinuous function and the near-tip asymptotic displacement functions are added to the CVMMM approximation using the framework of complex variable moving least-squares (CVMLS) approximation. This enables the domain to be modeled by CVMMM without explicitly meshing the crack surfaces. The enriched crack-tip functions are chosen as those that span the asymptotic displacement fields for an interfacial crack. The complex stress intensity factors for bimaterial interfacial cracks were numerically evaluated using the method. Good agreement between the numerical results and the reference solutions for benchmark interfacial crack problems is realized.


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