This article appeared in a journal published by Elsevier. The attached copy is furnished to the author for internal non-commercial research and education use, including for instruction at the authors institution and sharing with colleagues. Other uses, including reproduction and distribution, or selling or licensing copies, or posting to personal, institutional or third party websites are prohibited. In most cases authors are permitted to post their version of the article (e.g. in Word or Tex form) to their personal website or institutional repository. Authors requiring further information regarding Elsevier's archiving and manuscript policies are encouraged to visit:
A displacement-based finite element for static and stability analyses of sandwich plates is formulated using a three-layer sandwich model. The face sheets are idealized as classical plate elements assuming the Kirchhoff—Love hypothesis. The core displacement field is derived using the solution of the underlying differential equations of the core in the through-thickness direction z and the assumed deflections of the face sheets as boundary conditions. The differential equations are determined based on a three-dimensional material law neglecting the in-plane core stiffnesses. This approach leads to in-plane core deformations uc and vc, which are cubic functions of z, and to an out-of-plane deflection wc, which is a quadratic function of z. Based on the interpolation functions, the linear and geometric stiffness matrix for static and stability problems are derived, whereas the geometric stiffness matrix is set up by considering geometric nonlinearities in the v. Kármán sense in the face sheets.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.