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Article Dans Une Revue Thin-Walled Structures Année : 2002

Deflections of inflatable fabric panels at high pressure

Résumé

Inflatable structures made of modem textile materials with important mechanical characteristics can be inflated at high pressure (up to a several hundreds of kPa). They can be used as strong building elements thanks to their mechanical strength. The aim of the paper is to present experimental and analytical studies on the behaviour of inflated fabric panels at high pressure and submitted to bending loads. It is shown that inflatable structures cannot be viewed as ordinary plates or beams, because their deformation pattern is quite different. Experiments show that their behaviour depends on the applied load, the inflation pressure, and the constitutive law of the fabrics. Equilibrium equations are written in the deformed state to take into account the influence of geometrical stiffness and the following forces. A Timoshenko's beam theory must be used because sections of the panels do not satisfy the usual Bernoulli's beam theory. A new inflatable beam theory is developed. Wrinkling loads are derived from equilibrium equations. Deflections satisfy the fact that the compliance of the inflatable panel is the sum of the beam compliance and of the yarn compliance. Comparisons between the results of our modelling and experimental results are shown and prove the accuracy of this theory on the mechanical strength of inflatable structures at high pressure.
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Dates et versions

hal-01006721 , version 1 (03-12-2016)

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Christian Wielgosz, Jean-Christophe Thomas. Deflections of inflatable fabric panels at high pressure. Thin-Walled Structures, 2002, 40 (6), pp.523-536. ⟨10.1016/S0263-8231(02)00010-1⟩. ⟨hal-01006721⟩
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