SAE Technical Paper Series 1984
DOI: 10.4271/840727
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Axial Collapse of Thin Wall Cylindrical Column

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Cited by 18 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Mechanically, the ideal cushion response is a typical characteristic of elastic buckling [147]. Therefore, one of the earliest and most rudimentary crash boxes (shock absorbers) consists of an array of prismatic slender tubes that buckle along their longitudinal axis upon impact [143,146,[148][149][150]. These tubes have cross-sectional geometries ranging from squares to circles.…”
Section: Energy Absorptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mechanically, the ideal cushion response is a typical characteristic of elastic buckling [147]. Therefore, one of the earliest and most rudimentary crash boxes (shock absorbers) consists of an array of prismatic slender tubes that buckle along their longitudinal axis upon impact [143,146,[148][149][150]. These tubes have cross-sectional geometries ranging from squares to circles.…”
Section: Energy Absorptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They presented predictions and experimental data on the plastic folding of square tubes from dynamic and quasi-static tests [1]. Analytical [2,3] and numerical [4][5][6][7] models have been widely used to study the axial crushing of circular and rectangular tubes. Nagel and Thambiratnam studied the effect of wall thickness and taper angle of some straight and tapered rectangular tubes on their energy absorption capacity [8,9].…”
Section: Previous Workmentioning
confidence: 99%