4.5 Article

Stability Analyses of Cracked Functionally Graded Graphene-Platelets Reinforced Composite Beam Covered with Piezoelectric Layers

Publisher

WORLD SCIENTIFIC PUBL CO PTE LTD
DOI: 10.1142/S021945542350164X

Keywords

Functionally graded materials; graphene-nanoplates reinforced composites; stability; edge-crack; piezoelectric layers

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This paper investigates the effect of cracks on the stability of the cracked functionally graded graphene-nanoplates reinforced composite beam covered with piezoelectric layers. The critical buckling loads and postbuckling paths of the novel structures with cracks are studied. The results show that the graphene platelets (GPLs) can significantly improve the stability of the cracked piezoelectric beams, while increasing crack depth has the opposite effect.
As cracks are unavoidable and always reduce structural local stiffness and strength, this paper pays attention to the effect of cracks on the stability of the cracked functionally graded (FG) graphene-nanoplates reinforced composite (GRC) beam covered with piezoelectric layers. Both the critical buckling loads and postbuckling paths of the novel structures with cracks are considered. The massless rotational spring model is employed to calculate the bending stiffness of the cracked section. Three different graphene platelets (GPLs) distribution patterns along the thickness direction of the FG-GRC core beam are studied. The effective material properties of the FG-GRC core beam are calculated by Halpin-Tsai model and the rule of mixture. The governing equations of stability of the cracked FG-GRC piezoelectric beam are established within the framework of the first-order shear deformation beam theory, von Karman geometric nonlinearity and Ritz method. The direct iteration method is used to examine the effects of boundary conditions, crack parameters, piezoelectric layers and GPL parameters on the critical buckling loads and postbuckling responses of the cracked FG-GRC piezoelectric beams. Results clearly illustrate that GPLs can significantly improve the stability of the cracked FG-GRC piezoelectric beams, while the increasing crack depth has the opposite effect.

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