Structural Analysis and Finite Element Modeling of Aluminum Honeycomb Sandwich Structures

The objective of this research is to determine how the sandwich's physical characteristics have an impact on the mechanical properties, determine under what conditions the specimens will be lighter and mechanically stronger, and determine if the use of an aluminum honeycomb sandwich as a construction material is feasible. The research has aimed at the use of aluminum sandwiches as light and strong material. The study of the structural layers' damage resistance and tolerance demonstrated that the top and bottom layers play a crucial role. The thesis presents three test results from aluminum honeycomb sandwich compression horizontal, compressive vertical, and bending tests. Also, each group was displayed mechanically and simulated in Abaqus. The study determines the mechanical properties such as maximum elastic stress-strain, ultimate stress-strain, fracture point, density, poison ration, young modulus, and maximum deflection was determined. The energy absorbed by the FEA, such modulus of elasticity, resilience, and toughness, the crack propagation, the test's view shows aluminum honeycomb behaved like a brittle material with both compression test. And the maximum deflection, crack propagation, shear forces, bending moment, and images illustrated that the layers play a crucial role in the 3-point bend test.
Date: May 2021
Creator: Doukoure, Maimouna
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Novel Thermal Regenerative Electrochemical System for Energy Recovery from Waste Heat (open access)

A Novel Thermal Regenerative Electrochemical System for Energy Recovery from Waste Heat

Waste-heat-to-power (WHP) recovers electrical power from exhaust heat emitted by industrial and commercial facilities. Waste heat is available in enormous quantities. The U.S. Department of Energy estimates 5-13 quadrillion BTUs/yr with a technical potential of 14.6 GW are available and could be utilized to generate power by converting the heat into electricity. The research proposed here will define a system that can economically recover energy from waste heat through a thermal regenerative electrochemical system. The primary motivation came from a patent and the research sponsored by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL). The proposed system improves on this patent in four major ways: by using air/oxygen, rather than hydrogen; by eliminating the cross diffusion of counter ions and using a dual membrane cell design; and by using high concentrations of electrolytes that have boiling points below water. Therefore, this system also works at difficult-to-recover low temperatures. Electrochemical power is estimated at 0.2W/cm2, and for a 4.2 M solution at 1 L/s, the power of a 100 kW system is 425 kW. Distillation energy costs are simulated and found to be 504 kJ/s for a 1 kg/s feed stream. The conversion efficiency is then calculated at 84%. The Carnot efficiency for …
Date: May 2021
Creator: Gray, David B
System: The UNT Digital Library