Reduction method for thermal analysis of complex aerospace structures
Abstract
A reduction method which combines classical Rayleigh-Ritz modal superposition techniques with contemporary finite-element methods is applied to transient nonlinear thermal analysis of aerospace structures. The essence of the method is the use of a few thermal modes from eigenvalue analyses as basis vectors to represent the temperature response in the structure. The method is used to obtain approximate temperature histories for a portion of the Shuttle orbiter wing subject to reentry heating and for a large space antenna reflector subject to heating associated with a low Earth orbit. The reduction method has excellent potential for significant size reduction for radiation-dominated problems such as the antenna reflector. However, for conduction-dominated problems such as the Shuttle wing, especially those with complex spatial and temporal variations in the applied heating, additional work appears necessary to find alternate sources of basis vectors which will permit significant problem size reductions.
- Publication:
-
NASA STI/Recon Technical Report N
- Pub Date:
- January 1985
- Bibcode:
- 1985STIN...8516066S
- Keywords:
-
- Aerospace Engineering;
- Antennas;
- Optimization;
- Space Shuttles;
- Structural Analysis;
- Thermal Analysis;
- Wings;
- Finite Element Method;
- Heat Transfer;
- Heating;
- Reflectors;
- Space-Time Functions;
- Temperature Effects;
- Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer