Marko04
Industrial
- Apr 13, 2016
- 7
Hi,
I am currently designing an assembly (clip) that will be used to fasten the architectural panels/cladding to. The clip is fastened to building wall substrate and is suppose to be able to carry both the cladding dead-loads plus resists the negative wind pressures (pull force).
The clip assembly is made out of 6063 T5 Aluminum. It consists of two aluminum parts and one thermo-plastic part (thermal-break). The two aluminum parts' crimping legs are crimping the thermal break and keeping it ib place. The crimping force is strong so shear failure where aluminum crimping legs pinch thermal break is not an issue here. What I am trying to see
whether or not these aluminum legs will fail when the clip is subjected to a dead load of 65 lbf at its very end and a windload of 215 lbf. ( The cladding dead-load would be a vertical force vector creating a bending stress on the clip while the wind load would be a horizontal force vector creating a tensile stress on the clip). When I run the FEA analysis I get high stress concentrations at the inner corners of crimping legs. I would like to know from the FEA results I obtained whether these crimping legs would deform/fracture while resisting the above mentioned loads since they have high stress concentrations at inner corners that are approx 3 times greater than the 6063 T5's yield strength. (Highest stress: approx: 63000 psi, 6063 t5 approx yield strength: 21000 psi). Will these stress concentration ( red areas shown in inside corners of crimping legs) cause a crack and ultimately failure in them? Or will the region around the stress concentration undergo plastic deformation, re-distributing loads elsewhere causing no issue/ no failure? I would greatly appreciate your input. Thanks.
Below is an animation video of the assembly and how it would behave with the loads I mentioned above:
Image of high stress concentration in the inside corners of the crimping legs:
Crimping legs zoomed out:
Crimping legs holding thermal break in place:
I am currently designing an assembly (clip) that will be used to fasten the architectural panels/cladding to. The clip is fastened to building wall substrate and is suppose to be able to carry both the cladding dead-loads plus resists the negative wind pressures (pull force).
The clip assembly is made out of 6063 T5 Aluminum. It consists of two aluminum parts and one thermo-plastic part (thermal-break). The two aluminum parts' crimping legs are crimping the thermal break and keeping it ib place. The crimping force is strong so shear failure where aluminum crimping legs pinch thermal break is not an issue here. What I am trying to see
whether or not these aluminum legs will fail when the clip is subjected to a dead load of 65 lbf at its very end and a windload of 215 lbf. ( The cladding dead-load would be a vertical force vector creating a bending stress on the clip while the wind load would be a horizontal force vector creating a tensile stress on the clip). When I run the FEA analysis I get high stress concentrations at the inner corners of crimping legs. I would like to know from the FEA results I obtained whether these crimping legs would deform/fracture while resisting the above mentioned loads since they have high stress concentrations at inner corners that are approx 3 times greater than the 6063 T5's yield strength. (Highest stress: approx: 63000 psi, 6063 t5 approx yield strength: 21000 psi). Will these stress concentration ( red areas shown in inside corners of crimping legs) cause a crack and ultimately failure in them? Or will the region around the stress concentration undergo plastic deformation, re-distributing loads elsewhere causing no issue/ no failure? I would greatly appreciate your input. Thanks.
Below is an animation video of the assembly and how it would behave with the loads I mentioned above:
Image of high stress concentration in the inside corners of the crimping legs:
Crimping legs zoomed out:
Crimping legs holding thermal break in place: