On the Resistance of Cruciform Structures during Ship Collision and Grounding
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Experimental Details
2.1. Test Specimen
2.2. Quasi-Static Indentation Test
2.3. Tensile Test
3. Numerical Simulation
4. Comparative Analysis between Test and Simulation
4.1. Force-Displacement Curve
4.2. Deformation
5. Analytical Method
5.1. Upper Bound Theorem
5.2. Deformation Mode and Analysis Method
- The deformation of the cruciform is divided into plastic deformation and elastic buckling zones and the dissipation of energy for elastic buckling zones is negligible. In addition, local indentation of the surface plate of the specimen is small, thus its effect on the overall structural resistance is ignored.
- It is assumed that the whole structure produces local compression deformation in the initial stages of loading. The cruciform is destabilized and folds are produced when the indentation depth reaches a threshold value.
- The deflection at the mid-axis region of the cruciform is small, and its effect on the outer part of component panels is not considered. Similarly, the deflection of the elastic buckling zones is small, therefore its effect on the deflection of the folds is neglected.
- Since the structure and the load are symmetrical about the central axis, the deformation modes of the four component panels are similar. The analytical approach in this paper assumes that the deformation of the four panels is identical and symmetrical about the central axis.
- The indenter was loaded at a low constant velocity in the test, so the effect of the material strain rate was ignored in the analytical method.
- Figure 10a shows the schematic of the initial contact stage where the cruciform produces local compression deformation without folding. The area of compression is closely related to the depth of indentation and the size of the indenter.
- Figure 10b shows the overall deformation process of a component panel of the cruciform. After the initial stage, plastic hinges and three folds are formed in the plastic deformation zone. The ratio of the maximum width of these folds from top to bottom is 1:3:2, i.e., AB:BC:CD = 1:3:2. The total height of the deformation zone is 6H. Figure 11a shows the deformation schematic of the cruciform, where the deformation of the four component panels is symmetrical about the central axis and the deformed cruciform presents a windmill shape in the top view. Figure 11b shows the fold generating process.
5.3. Validation of the Analytical Method
6. Conclusions
- The results of the test and simulations, i.e., the deformation mode and the load-displacement curve of the specimen, were compared. The trend of force displacement curves matched well, and the peak forces of the test and numerical simulations were 397.51 kN and 421.12 kN, with an error of 5%.
- Observations of deformation in the test and the simulated specimen showed that the cruciform structure produced a 1:3:2 ratio of fold heights and that the deformations of four component panels were symmetrical about the central axis.
- By analyzing the deformation mode of the specimen in the test and the simulation, the deformation process of the specimen could be divided into two stages: the initial contact stage and the fold-forming stage. On this basis, a two-stage simplified deformation process of cruciform was proposed. By analyzing the energy dissipation mechanism in each stage, we obtained analytical formulae for predicting the instantaneous and mean resistance of the cruciform under in-plane loading.
- A comparison of the analytical results with the experimental and simulation results showed that the analytical method proposed in this paper can effectively predict the structural resistance of cruciform structures under in-plane loads. The analytical peak resistance was 402.67 kN, closer to the experimental data, indicating that the analytical method provides a more accurate solution.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Nomenclature
A | plate area |
Ag | maximum uniform strain |
C | Rm(e/n)n |
e | natural constant |
bending energy dissipation rate | |
membrane stretching energy dissipation rate | |
internal energy dissipation rate | |
F | external force |
Fw | average structural resistance |
Fw(δ) | instantaneous structural resistance |
H | characteristic height of a fold |
L | length of a single panel |
Lc | compression width in a single panel |
l | weld length |
li | plastic hinge length |
Mαβ | bending moment |
M0,w | moment on plastic hinge per unit length |
Nαβ | plane membrane tensile stress tensor |
N0,w | tensile force generated by a unit thickness plate |
n | ln(1 + Ag) |
Rm | ultimate stress |
S | plastic deformation area |
tw | cruciform thickness |
Greek symbols | |
α | rotation angle of plastic hinge |
angular velocity | |
δ | indentation depth |
velocity | |
εe | engineering strain |
εt | true strain |
εMA | average strain at the plastic hinge MA |
average strain rate at the plastic hinge MA | |
strain rate | |
equivalent strain rate | |
average strain rate of a plate in lengthways | |
σ0/σ0,w | flow stress |
σe | engineering stress |
σt | true stress |
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Refs. | Material | Indenter | Method | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Experimental | Analytical | Numerical | |||
[3] | Aluminum alloy | Flat indenter | X | X | |
[4] | Mild steel, aluminum alloy | Flat indenter | X | ||
[5] | Mild steel | Flat indenter | X | X | |
[7] | Mild steel | Flat indenter | X | ||
[8] | Aluminum alloy | Flat indenter | X | ||
[9] | Aluminum alloy | Flat and ellipsoidal indenter | X | X | |
[16] | Aluminum alloy | Flat indenter | X | X | |
This paper | Mild steel | Hemisphere indenter | X | X | X |
Properties | Unit | |
---|---|---|
Density | kg/m3 | 7850 |
Young’s modulus | GPa | 213 |
Poisson’s ratio | - | 0.3 |
Yield stress | MPa | 221 |
Ultimate tensile strength | MPa | 353 |
Rupture strain | - | 0.35 |
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Liu, H.; Liu, K.; Wang, X.; Gao, Z.; Wang, J. On the Resistance of Cruciform Structures during Ship Collision and Grounding. J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2023, 11, 459. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse11020459
Liu H, Liu K, Wang X, Gao Z, Wang J. On the Resistance of Cruciform Structures during Ship Collision and Grounding. Journal of Marine Science and Engineering. 2023; 11(2):459. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse11020459
Chicago/Turabian StyleLiu, Hewei, Kun Liu, Xiufei Wang, Zhenguo Gao, and Jiaxia Wang. 2023. "On the Resistance of Cruciform Structures during Ship Collision and Grounding" Journal of Marine Science and Engineering 11, no. 2: 459. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse11020459
APA StyleLiu, H., Liu, K., Wang, X., Gao, Z., & Wang, J. (2023). On the Resistance of Cruciform Structures during Ship Collision and Grounding. Journal of Marine Science and Engineering, 11(2), 459. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse11020459