Probing shells against buckling: a non-destructive technique for laboratory testing
J. Michael T. Thompson, John W. Hutchinson, Jan Sieber

TL;DR
This paper explores a non-destructive probing technique to assess buckling behavior in shells and cylinders, providing insights into their stability and energy barriers, with experimental validation and analysis of potential complications.
Contribution
It introduces a novel probing method for structural buckling testing, analyzing nonlinear responses and stability issues to improve experimental assessment of shell stability.
Findings
Excellent agreement with theoretical solutions in tests
Identification of nonlinear probing responses and bifurcations
Strategies for stabilizing probing responses
Abstract
This paper addresses testing of compressed structures, such as shells, that exhibit catastrophic buckling and notorious imperfection sensitivity. The central concept is the probing of a loaded structural specimen by a controlled lateral displacement to gain quantitative insight into its buckling behaviour and to measure the energy barrier against buckling. This can provide design information about a structure's stiffness and robustness against buckling in terms of energy and force landscapes. Developments in this area are relatively new but have proceeded rapidly with encouraging progress. Recent experimental tests on uniformly compressed spherical shells, and axially loaded cylinders, show excellent agreement with theoretical solutions. The probing technique could be a valuable experimental procedure for testing prototype structures, but before it can be used a range of potential…
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