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FEASIBILITY STUDY OF LIGHTWEIGHT HIGH-STRENGTH HOLLOW CORE BALSA-FRP COMPOSITE BEAMS UNDER FLEXURE
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TitleFEASIBILITY STUDY OF LIGHTWEIGHT HIGH-STRENGTH HOLLOW CORE BALSA-FRP COMPOSITE BEAMS UNDER FLEXURE
AuthorO'Neill, Kevin
Keywordsbalsa
frp
composite
carbon
glass
fiber
AbstractThe United States of America s Military, more specifically the Army, has since the late 1990 s had a vested interest in the development of super-lightweight, portable, short-span composite bridge and decking components to replace aging heavy metal-alloy machine driven modular systems. The following study looks at the feasibility of using balsa wood as the structural core material in fiber reinforced polymer (FRP) wrapped hollow-core composites in short-span bridge applications. The balsa provides shear resistance and the FRP the flexural resistance, resulting in extremely high strength-to-weight and strength-to-depth ratios. Several scaled short span specimens were constructed and tested using a variety of fibers and resins. In addition, a calibrated finite element model (FEM) was developed using data acquired through testing. Of the 3 FRP-matrices tested (carbon-polyurethane, glass-polyurethane, and carbon-epoxy-resin), the carbon-epoxy-resin had the stiffest cross-section and highest ultimate load achieved, although the fiber did not have the highest elastic modulus and ultimate rupture strength of the constituent materials. The carbon-polyurethane fiber had the largest elastic modulus and ultimate strength, but due to construction difficulties did not perform as well as expected. The glass-polyurethane fiber had the lowest elastic modulus and ultimate load with high strain values and performed accordingly during specimen testing. Given the constraints of self-weight, section geometry, and deflection set forth for lightweight short-span portable bridging solutions, this study demonstrates that the balsa-FRP composite systems are viable solutions; in particular, when carbon fabric is paired with balsa cores.
AdviserMackie, Kevin
PublisherUniversity of Central Florida
DegreeM.S.C.E.
Degree DisciplineDepartment of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Degree GrantorEngineering and Computer Science
Degree ProgramCivil Engineering MS
Graduation Date2010-01-01
TypeMaster's thesis
Access LevelPublic - Allow Worldwide Access
Release Date2010-05-07
RepositoryUniversity Archives
Repository CollectionElectronic Theses and Dissertations
IdentifierCFE0002997
Access Linkhttp://purl.fcla.edu/fcla/etd/CFE0002997

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