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Title: Low-velocity impact response of wood-strand sandwich panels and their components
Abstract Profiled hollow core sandwich panels (SPs) and their components (outer layers and core) were manufactured with ponderosa and lodgepole pine wood strands to determine the effects of low-velocity impact forces and to observe their energy absorption (EA) capacities and failure modes. An instrumented drop weight impact system was applied and the tests were performed by releasing the impact head from 500 mm for all the specimens while the impactors (IMPs) were equipped with hemispherical and flat head cylindrical heads. SPs with cavities filled with a rigid foam insulation material (SP foam ) were also tested to understand the change in EA behavior and failure mode. Failure modes induced by both IMPs to SPs were found to be splitting, perforating, penetrating, core crushing and debonding between the core and the outer layers. SP foam s absorbed 26% more energy than unfilled SPs. SP foam s with urethane foam suffer less severe failure modes than SPs. SPs in a ridge-loading configuration absorbed more impact energy than those in a valley-loading configuration, especially when impacted by a hemispherical IMP. Based on the results, it is evident that sandwich structure is more efficient than a solid panel concerning impact energy absorption, primarily due to a larger elastic section modulus of the core’s corrugated geometry.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
1150316
NSF-PAR ID:
10077609
Author(s) / Creator(s):
; ; ;
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Holzforschung
Volume:
72
Issue:
8
ISSN:
0018-3830
Page Range / eLocation ID:
681 to 689
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
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