Dear SWComposites, Gbor (sorry don't know your names) and all who shared knowledge in this topic - thank you very much for your patience.
What you're discussed here was something I was looking for long time and could not find. My problem is that at my time I had no possibility to go to university so my math base is very poor if non existent. Also language limitations don’t help much. But enough of excuses (here we have a joke about bad dancer and balls that hinder him - it might well be international). How ever I'm determinant (i.e. persistent as a donkey) to learn.
So would someone rise to challenge and summarize what was discussed here? That would make an invaluable source for many IMHO.
So to model a sandwich structure in NASTRAN (it will apply for most other FEA solvers).
What is proper way to define material for lamina plies?
1)2D orthotropic
2)3D orthotropic
I was thinking that 3D orthotropic because in case of non unidirectional fabric we may have different Ex,Ey,Ez etc.
(Note that 3D properties data is rarely available from manufacturers. I guess that there's some way to calculate 3D data from 2D? If so than it will be nice to learn how.
What is the proper way to define material for core material?
1) Foam
2) honeycomb (alu, nomex)
What would be the best choice of elements for complex 3D sandwich structure? I'm very new to NASTRAN? In ANSYS one would simply choose shell91 (composite) with sandwich option and assign material_1 (carbon/epoxy) with appropriate orientation and thickness for face laminates and material_2 (core) for mid layer. My stupidity prevented me from being able to define core material properly as usually only compression modulus
Compression strength
G13
G23
And ANSYS requires full set(9) for E,G and Nu.
What would be best approach to model complex sandwich structure from geometric point?
Import it as surfaces and than mesh it with shell elements?
SWComposites, you mentioned "If you are using 3D solid elements (where the skins and core could be modeled with separate elements) then the full 3D set of properties is required."
Would you (please! please!) explain a bit more thoroughly how one should do it - from geometry till meshing and material.
I'm not asking about modeling hard points, bolted and adhesive joints etc. as this is out of topic or is it?
If there are some dumb mistakes in this post please excuse and correct me.
Kotawsu – would you please share how you finally modeled your case and it correlated well with theoretical results?
Thank you all so much!
Adrian