Cable–rib satellite antennas are facing a growing challenging quest of technological operation and connected structural performance, specifically in the context of large–scale, deployable aerospace applications. In the framework of Limit Analysis, as a specific tool of structural modelling, within the Theory of Plasticity, accounting for potential material non–linearity, up to structural collapse, as an assumed general paradigm of structural resilience, the present contribution analyses a specific cable–rib satellite antenna through a novel evolutive algorithm, in order to assess possible activations of plastic joints, under perfect–plasticity conditions, and to consistently estimate static and kinematic features at incipient collapse. Modelling both beam elements (with a tubular cross–section) and cable elements, the underlying elastic–plastic analysis is then coupled to an optimisation process, toward the minimisation of displacements at incipient collapse, with respect to initial cable shortenings or, in an equivalent manner, cable pretensions. Further investigations are also developed, within the optimisation tool, re–joining dynamic modal properties with elastic–plastic outcomes, in order to minimise the total mass of the structure, at varying cross–section properties for each structural element, at given material features, under plastic admissibility constraints. The adopted evolutive elastic–plastic algorithm, combined with optimisation tools, is proven to constitute an efficient structural modelling paradigm and computational strategy, both from numerical and design standpoints, allowing for general effective analyses of deployable satellite antennas, even beyond the scopes of the investigation on the characteristic structural sample here targeted.
(2023). Elastic–Plastic Optimisation of a Cable–Rib Satellite Antenna . Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10446/263056
Elastic–Plastic Optimisation of a Cable–Rib Satellite Antenna
Cornaggia Aram;Ferrari Rosalba;Rizzi Egidio
2023-01-01
Abstract
Cable–rib satellite antennas are facing a growing challenging quest of technological operation and connected structural performance, specifically in the context of large–scale, deployable aerospace applications. In the framework of Limit Analysis, as a specific tool of structural modelling, within the Theory of Plasticity, accounting for potential material non–linearity, up to structural collapse, as an assumed general paradigm of structural resilience, the present contribution analyses a specific cable–rib satellite antenna through a novel evolutive algorithm, in order to assess possible activations of plastic joints, under perfect–plasticity conditions, and to consistently estimate static and kinematic features at incipient collapse. Modelling both beam elements (with a tubular cross–section) and cable elements, the underlying elastic–plastic analysis is then coupled to an optimisation process, toward the minimisation of displacements at incipient collapse, with respect to initial cable shortenings or, in an equivalent manner, cable pretensions. Further investigations are also developed, within the optimisation tool, re–joining dynamic modal properties with elastic–plastic outcomes, in order to minimise the total mass of the structure, at varying cross–section properties for each structural element, at given material features, under plastic admissibility constraints. The adopted evolutive elastic–plastic algorithm, combined with optimisation tools, is proven to constitute an efficient structural modelling paradigm and computational strategy, both from numerical and design standpoints, allowing for general effective analyses of deployable satellite antennas, even beyond the scopes of the investigation on the characteristic structural sample here targeted.File | Dimensione del file | Formato | |
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