个人信息Personal Information
教授
博士生导师
硕士生导师
性别:男
毕业院校:丹麦技术大学
学位:博士
所在单位:力学与航空航天学院
电子邮箱:chenggd@dlut.edu.cn
Optimum design of thermally loaded beam-columns for maximum vibration frequency or buckling temperature
点击次数:
论文类型:期刊论文
发表时间:2015-08-01
发表刊物:INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOLIDS AND STRUCTURES
收录刊物:SCIE、EI、Scopus
卷号:66
页面范围:20-34
ISSN号:0020-7683
关键字:Thermal load; Beam-column; Bimodal optimum; Fundamental natural frequency of vibrations; Critical thermal buckling temperature
摘要:With the cross-sectional area function as the design variable, we seek the optimum design of clamped-clamped, thin, linearly elastic beam-columns under thermal load that maximizes the buckling temperature or the fundamental natural frequency of transverse vibrations. The beam-columns have given length, geometrically similar cross-sections of variable size and a given volume of material. A lower and/or upper bound constraint may be prescribed for the cross-sectional area of the beam-columns. To account for possible bimodality of the optimum designs, both the unimodal and bimodal optimality criterion approaches are applied. For a lower bound smaller than a specific value, bimodal optimum designs are obtained for problems of maximum buckling temperature. When maximizing the thermal fundamental natural frequency, optimum designs may be uni- or bimodal depending on the values of the given thermal load and the lower bound on the cross-sectional area. The geometrically unconstrained optimum design for maximum fundamental natural frequency obtained by Olhoff (1976) without consideration of thermal load, is shown to be at the same time an optimum design that maximizes the fundamental natural frequency at any temperature rise, but it is found to be associated with zero buckling load. Moreover, the optimum design maximizing the critical buckling temperature is very similar to that maximizing the mechanical buckling load obtained by Olhoff and Rasmussen (1977). This interesting analogy is explained by studying optimum design for minimum axial compressive force. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.