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Title: fosls anatomy


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Posted Chapters of Bjørn Haugens 1994 Thesis
Title Buckling and Stability Problems for Thin
Shell Structures Using High Performance Finite
Elements
AFEM Ch 31 - Thesis Ch 4 Triangular ANDES Shell
Element AFEM Ch 32 - Thesis Ch 5 Quad ANDES
Shell Element AFEM Ch 33 - Thesis Ch 6-8
Numerical Examples and
References
Complete Thesis (in PDF) available on request
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A New Sandwich Design Concept for Ships
ADMOS 2003, Göteborg, Sweden
  • Pål G. Bergan
  • Det Norske Veritas, Høvik, Norway
  • and
  • NTNU, Trondheim, Norway

26
Topics of the Lecture
  • Some examples of challenges in ship modelling and
    simulation
  • Some general problems
  • Container ship
  • Liquid natural gas ship
  • A new concept for building ships using steel and
    light-weight concrete design
  • Some conclusions

27
Characteristics of Ship Structures
  • Many pieces of steel welded together, e.g. more
    than 100 000 in a large ship
  • Many types of structural elements
  • Outer skins, internal skins
  • Bulkheads
  • Integrated ballast tanks
  • Girders, frames, stringers
  • Stiffeners, brackets, lug-plates, cut-outs
  • Cutouts, surface grinding and polishing
  • Numerous stress concentrations
  • Corrosion serious problem

28
Particular Considerations for Modeling and
Analysis
  • Enormous scale effects from overall ship beam
    (e.g. more than 400 meters long) to stress
    concentrations around weld or crack
  • Good modeling of ship beam requires inclusion of
    a significant number of secondary and tertiary
    structural elements
  • Fatigue and fracture analysis requires and
    detailed and accurate analysis of stress
    concentrations and cracks
  • Dynamic response analysis integrated with
    hydrodynamic simulation
  • Ultimate strength analysis by way of buckling
    and/or nonlinear simulation

29
Typical Analysis Steps for Ship Analysis
30
Container ship
Global structural model 3-and 4-node
elements Containers with low E-modulus Modelled
in PATRAN/NASTRAN, transferred to SESAM
31
Hydrodynamic Model
32
Hydrodynamic Load Analysis
Dynamic pressures for head sea and max hogging
condition
33
Ultimate load state (ULS) checks
34
Hot spot stress analysis at hatch corner
35
Liquid Natural Gas (LNG) Ship
Global finite element model
36
Stepwise Construction of Global Model
37
Wave Motion and Pressures
38
Hot Spots
39
Structural Problems Bulk Carrier
40
Steel Light-weight Concrete Sandwich
From complex steel structure to clean sandwich
structure

The main idea is to replace stiffened steel
panels by steel-concrete sandwich elements for
main load carrying structural components
41
Cellular Sandwich
The light-weight concrete is filled into the
space between the surface steel sheets to
completely occupy the internal space and bond to
the steel along all sides
  • The steel sheets provide the major part of the
    structural strength
  • The concrete provides some strength and stiffness
    in compression, but not in tension (conservative
    assumption)
  • The concrete provides a stiff spacing between the
    surface sheets and supports against surface skin
    buckling
  • The need for secondary stiffeners is eliminated
  • The concrete has sufficient strength to transfer
    relevant transverse shear forces in plates
  • The number of details prone to coating failure
    with subsequent corrosion and fatigue is greatly
    reduced
  • A concrete with a density below approximately 900
    kg/m3 is preferred to keep down the total weight

Steel plate
Light weight aggregate concrete
Steel plate
Thin walled steel spar box
42
Using Experience from Other Applications
  • Steel-concrete sandwich elements have been used
    successfully for bridge structures, which are
    also exposed to large dynamic loads and demanding
    environmental conditions
  • Composite sandwich structural elements are used
    in air plane wing structures, wind turbine wings,
    trains, naval ships, and other severely loaded
    structures as a particularly efficient design
    solution
  • Shipbuilding should learn from successful
    experiences in other industries

43
Panmax Bulk Carrier
44
Some Characteristics of the Concept
  • Longitudinal girder stiffened double bottom
    structure
  • Solid sandwich structure in deck
  • Continuous hatch coaming beam structure
  • Partly hollow sandwich elements in ship sides,
    transverse bulkheads, and double bottom
  • Traditional fore and aft ship design in the
    present study
  • Ballast water carried primarily in cargo holds
  • HT 36 steel throughout cargo area
  • Minimum steel skin plate thickness 10 millimetre
  • Concrete properties (example)
  • density 900 kg/m3
  • compressive cube strength 14 MPa
  • tensile splitting strength 2.5 MPa
  • failure strain in compression 2-2.5
    similar to yield strain for steel
  • E-modulus 6000 MPa
  • More than 50 of concrete strength achieved
    after a few days

45
Cross-section of ship beam
  • Global and local load cases from DNV Steel Ship
    Rules
  • Initial scantlings selected
  • Linear FEM analysis to determine sectional forces
    with stiffness contribution of concrete in
    both compression and tension
  • Scantling optimisation of sections assuming no
    tensile concrete strength safety factor 1.4 for
    concrete compressive strength
  • DNV Steel Ship Rule longitudinal strength
    requirements satisfied without including
    contribution from concrete
  • Confirmation that all local buckling modes are
    eliminated
  • Depth of sandwich minimum 70 millimetre to avoid
    global buckling of deck slab outside the hatch
    coaming

46
LNG carrier
Primary barrier 9 Ni Steel or Invar steel
Insulation layer e.g. geomaterial
47
LNG carrier
48
Tanker for oil or chemicals
Sandwich deck
Easy to clean ballast cells
Ice strengthened side structure
Stainless steel primary barrier
49
Safety and Structural Attributes
  • Reduced number of fatigue and corrosion prone
    details
  • Buckling failure modes virtually eliminated
  • Increased hull torsion stiffness
  • Increased energy absorption in case of collision
    or grounding
  • Increased strength to withstand explosions and
    accidental loads
  • Increased stiffness of aft ship to avoid
    vibrations and propeller shaft bearing damages

50
Safety and Operational Attributes
  • Increased resistance against damage from cargo
    handling equipment
  • Better damping of dynamic stresses and response
    from hydrodynamic loads
  • Enhanced damping of noise and vibrations from
    machinery and propulsion system
  • Simplified hull structure maintenance
  • Significantly reduced coating area
  • Increased service life
  • Highly fire resistant and insulating hull

51
Sandwich Application Potential
  • Sandwich design can be adapted to many different
    ship types
  • Sandwich design can be introduced for parts of a
    ship
  • The sandwich concept can be used for
    reinforcement of existing ships
  • The sandwich concept can be used for repair and
    strengthening of degradation and damage

52
Initial Cost and Life Cycle Cost
  • Building
  • Price competitive design where 40 of the steel
    weight is exchanged with cheaper concrete
    material
  • Much fewer fabrication details and less welding
  • Potential for automization and modular
    construction
  • Significantly reduced coating area and cost
  • Operation
  • Hull maintenance cost expected to be reduced
  • Other operational advantages because of layout?
  • Scrap value uncertain

53
Conclusions
  • There are still major challenges in practical
    modeling and simulation of ship structures
  • The complexity and mere size of these structures
    offer particular difficulties
  • Practical analyses require coupling of several
    analysis tools
  • A new idea for building ships using a steel
    -concrete sandwich concept has been presented
  • This concept seems to offer a wide range of
    advantages, but further development of the
    technology is required

54
Combining High Performance Thin Shell and Surface
Crack Finite Elements For Simulation of Combined
Failure Modes
  • Bjørn Skallerud
  • Kjell Holthe
  • Bjørn Haugen
  • The Norwegian Universitey of Science
    Technology
  • Dept. of Structural Engineering, Trondheim,
    Norway
  • FEDEM Technology, USA

55
Application free spanning oil/gas pipelines
56
Two Bending-Induced Pipeline Failure Modes
Mode 1 Ovalization plastic buckling on the
compressive side
Mode 2 Wall crack on the tensile side
57
Solid FE Modeling of Pipe Wall
Advantages accurate, no additional
modeling needed. Disadvantages time consuming
as regards preprocessing and simulation
3D Solid Model (ANSYS)
58
Thin Shell Model of Pipe Wall
Bjørn Haugens corotational quad thin shell
element used (preferred to triangle since mesh
generation is easy for a pipe - all elements are
rectangles) Plastic buckling failure mode
small-strain elastoplasticity (stress resultant
or thickness-integrated) Tensile cracking
fracture mechanics by link elements
59
Design Rules are Very Conservative for Tension
Solution use two-parameter fracture mechanics
(constraint correction) and direct numerical
simulation
60
Formulation works well for large disp/rot, e.g.
inelastic collapse of pinched cylinder
From Haugens thesis, note that triangles are
used here
61
A comment on elastic-plastic analysis, stress
resultants versus integration through thickness
  • Run Ninc up to max load, elastic analysis
    CPUelastRun Ninc up to max load, elasti-plastic
    analysis CPUelast-plastgt CPUplast
    CPUelast-plast - CPUelast

Number of integration points over thickness 1
2 3 5 7 10
12
1.0 1.23 1.40 1.55 1.75 2.25
2.22 1.0 1.28 1.38 1.49 1.62 1.85
2.00 1.0 1.02 1.13 1.29 1.33
1.51 1.75 1.0 1.22 1.31 1.52 1.80
2.03 2.21
Plate bending Scordelis-Lo Plate
buckling(Q) Plate buckling (R)
1.0 1.19 1.30 1.46 1.63 1.90
2.05
Plasticity model Integration over thickness
(using 5 integr. points) approximately 50 more
time consuming than Stress resultant plasticity
62
Fracture By Line Spring Finite Element
Reduces 3D crack problem to 2D, has a sound
fracture mechanics basis from slip line analysis
of the crack ligament
63
Line spring relationships
64
Line spring fe discretization, 8 DOF, elongation
and rotation (opening of the crack)
65
Summary of Formulation
  • Quadrilateral ANDES FE, co-rotated kinematics,
    consistent tangent
  • Stress resultants, linear hardening for the shell
    element, consistent tangent
  • Rect line spring FE, co-rotated kinematics, power
    law hardening, alternative stress updates tried
    (expl, impl euler), yield surface with corners,
    calculates fracture mechanics quantities such as
    J-integral, CTOD, T-stress(constraint)
  • Increm-iterative solution of global eqs using
    Newton-Raphson and a simplified arc-length method

66
Some Test Cases
ANSYS 3D bricks
Corotational quad shell link elements
CPU for 3D, half of full model 60000 sec CPU
for shell/link full model 100 sec
67
Visualisation of J-integral in Crack
68
CTOD versus Strain
69
Load-Displacement Response in Bending, D/t80
70
Failure Modes Plastic Buckling vs Fracture
71
J-Integral versus Load
72
Conclusions
  • A very feasible tool for assessment of critical
    compressive strains and fracture mechanics
    quantities (by means of two-parameter fract mech)
  • Mesh generation requires only 6 input parameters
    (providing automatic meshing of shell and crack)
  • Needs special treatment for short cracks (a/t lt
    0.15, which is the most interesting sizes for
    practical applications and assessments)
  • Further work nonlinear hardening for the shell
    material, ductile tearing of the crack (both a
    semi-elliptical crack growing through thickness,
    and further along the circumference as a through
    crack)
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