SwimBikeRun4342
Mechanical
- Mar 6, 2013
- 28
I am planning to simulate the crashworthiness of various landing gear designs for an aircraft and I have many questions regarding the process to evaluate crashworthiness. In summary, I want to compare the performance of a couple landing gear designs with respect to crashworthiness.
Questions Set 1:
What is the primary measurement that is used to quantify crashworthiness? My initial research shows that it is "energy absorption" but there are many different types of energies that a landing gear can absorb during impact - frictional energy dissipation, plastic dissipation, kinetic energy, strain energy, etc. Is there a specific energy quantity that must be measured in a simulation?
Questions Set 2:
How do you simulate the loss of these energy quantities? I plan on beginning with commercial finite element packages. Do you simulate the actual impact (the entire impact of the structure, which is a very advanced FEA simulation)? Do you just model the forces that act on each component and document the resulting strain energy and plastic energy dissipation? Currently, I have information on the time-varying forces that act on each component, would it be sufficient to model just the energy absorption due to these forces? I feel that this would yield inaccuracies since only measuring the energy absorption due to these forces may neglect the frictional energy dissipation as well as other important energy quantities? Is it best just to simulate the entire impact of the model?
Questions Set 3:
What is the best FEA package for simulation crashworthiness? I am most experiences with ABAQUS. Is there an FEA software specifically focused on crashworthiness or impact simulations?
If anyone can help with ANY of the above questions, I would greatly appreciate it. Thanks!
Questions Set 1:
What is the primary measurement that is used to quantify crashworthiness? My initial research shows that it is "energy absorption" but there are many different types of energies that a landing gear can absorb during impact - frictional energy dissipation, plastic dissipation, kinetic energy, strain energy, etc. Is there a specific energy quantity that must be measured in a simulation?
Questions Set 2:
How do you simulate the loss of these energy quantities? I plan on beginning with commercial finite element packages. Do you simulate the actual impact (the entire impact of the structure, which is a very advanced FEA simulation)? Do you just model the forces that act on each component and document the resulting strain energy and plastic energy dissipation? Currently, I have information on the time-varying forces that act on each component, would it be sufficient to model just the energy absorption due to these forces? I feel that this would yield inaccuracies since only measuring the energy absorption due to these forces may neglect the frictional energy dissipation as well as other important energy quantities? Is it best just to simulate the entire impact of the model?
Questions Set 3:
What is the best FEA package for simulation crashworthiness? I am most experiences with ABAQUS. Is there an FEA software specifically focused on crashworthiness or impact simulations?
If anyone can help with ANY of the above questions, I would greatly appreciate it. Thanks!