Mass reduction of a conceptual microsatellite aluminum structure via employing perforation patterns

Mass reduction is a primary design goal pursued in satellite structural design, since the launch cost is proportional to their total mass. The most common mass reduction method currently employed is to introduce honeycomb structures, with space qualified composite materials as facing materials, i...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dawood, Sarmad Dawood Salman
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/114885/1/114885.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/114885/
http://ethesis.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/18199
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id my.upm.eprints.114885
record_format eprints
spelling my.upm.eprints.1148852025-02-25T02:06:26Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/114885/ Mass reduction of a conceptual microsatellite aluminum structure via employing perforation patterns Dawood, Sarmad Dawood Salman Mass reduction is a primary design goal pursued in satellite structural design, since the launch cost is proportional to their total mass. The most common mass reduction method currently employed is to introduce honeycomb structures, with space qualified composite materials as facing materials, into the structural design, especially for satellites with larger masses. However, efficient implementation of these materials requires significant expertise in their design, analysis, and fabrication processes; moreover, the material procurement costs are high, therefore increasing the overall program costs. Thus, the current work proposes a low-cost alternative approach through the design and implementation of geometrically-shaped, parametrically-defined metal perforation patterns, fabricated by standard processes. Four geometric shapes (diamonds, hexagons, squares, and triangles) were designed parametrically, and hence implemented onto several components of a structural design for a conceptual sub-100 kg microsatellite. Subsequently, a parametric design space was defined by developing two scale factor and also two aspect ratio variations on the four baseline shape designs. The change in the structure’s fundamental natural frequency, as a result of implementing each pattern shape and parameter variation, was the selection criterion, due to its importance during the launcher selection process. The best pattern from among the four alternatives was selected, after having validated the computational methodology. This validation was achieved through implementing experimental modal analysis on a scaled-down physical model of a primary load-bearing component of the structural design. The selected pattern design was hence refined iteratively, to yield the same value of fundamental natural frequency, but with significant mass reduction. From the findings, a significant mass reduction percentage of 23.15%, from 84.48 kg to 62.42 kg, utilizing the proposed perforation concept, was achieved in the final parametric design iteration. This reduction was relative to the baseline unperforated case, while maintaining the same fundamental natural frequency. Dynamic loading analyses were also performed, namely, quasi static, random, and shock loading analyses, utilizing both the baseline and the finalized perforated designs. These analyses investigated the contrast in the capabilities of the two design to withstand the nominal dynamic launch loads. The findings showed that the final perforated design did have the capacity to withstand the launch loads without yield failure, as indicated by the computed positive yield margins of safety for each loading type. With these encouraging outcomes, the perforated design concept proved that it could provide an opportunity to develop low-cost satellite structural designs with reduced mass, and with reasonably good structural performance. 2022-07 Thesis NonPeerReviewed text en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/114885/1/114885.pdf Dawood, Sarmad Dawood Salman (2022) Mass reduction of a conceptual microsatellite aluminum structure via employing perforation patterns. Doctoral thesis, Universiti Putra Malaysia. http://ethesis.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/18199 Aerospace engineering
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
topic Aerospace engineering
spellingShingle Aerospace engineering
Dawood, Sarmad Dawood Salman
Mass reduction of a conceptual microsatellite aluminum structure via employing perforation patterns
description Mass reduction is a primary design goal pursued in satellite structural design, since the launch cost is proportional to their total mass. The most common mass reduction method currently employed is to introduce honeycomb structures, with space qualified composite materials as facing materials, into the structural design, especially for satellites with larger masses. However, efficient implementation of these materials requires significant expertise in their design, analysis, and fabrication processes; moreover, the material procurement costs are high, therefore increasing the overall program costs. Thus, the current work proposes a low-cost alternative approach through the design and implementation of geometrically-shaped, parametrically-defined metal perforation patterns, fabricated by standard processes. Four geometric shapes (diamonds, hexagons, squares, and triangles) were designed parametrically, and hence implemented onto several components of a structural design for a conceptual sub-100 kg microsatellite. Subsequently, a parametric design space was defined by developing two scale factor and also two aspect ratio variations on the four baseline shape designs. The change in the structure’s fundamental natural frequency, as a result of implementing each pattern shape and parameter variation, was the selection criterion, due to its importance during the launcher selection process. The best pattern from among the four alternatives was selected, after having validated the computational methodology. This validation was achieved through implementing experimental modal analysis on a scaled-down physical model of a primary load-bearing component of the structural design. The selected pattern design was hence refined iteratively, to yield the same value of fundamental natural frequency, but with significant mass reduction. From the findings, a significant mass reduction percentage of 23.15%, from 84.48 kg to 62.42 kg, utilizing the proposed perforation concept, was achieved in the final parametric design iteration. This reduction was relative to the baseline unperforated case, while maintaining the same fundamental natural frequency. Dynamic loading analyses were also performed, namely, quasi static, random, and shock loading analyses, utilizing both the baseline and the finalized perforated designs. These analyses investigated the contrast in the capabilities of the two design to withstand the nominal dynamic launch loads. The findings showed that the final perforated design did have the capacity to withstand the launch loads without yield failure, as indicated by the computed positive yield margins of safety for each loading type. With these encouraging outcomes, the perforated design concept proved that it could provide an opportunity to develop low-cost satellite structural designs with reduced mass, and with reasonably good structural performance.
format Thesis
author Dawood, Sarmad Dawood Salman
author_facet Dawood, Sarmad Dawood Salman
author_sort Dawood, Sarmad Dawood Salman
title Mass reduction of a conceptual microsatellite aluminum structure via employing perforation patterns
title_short Mass reduction of a conceptual microsatellite aluminum structure via employing perforation patterns
title_full Mass reduction of a conceptual microsatellite aluminum structure via employing perforation patterns
title_fullStr Mass reduction of a conceptual microsatellite aluminum structure via employing perforation patterns
title_full_unstemmed Mass reduction of a conceptual microsatellite aluminum structure via employing perforation patterns
title_sort mass reduction of a conceptual microsatellite aluminum structure via employing perforation patterns
publishDate 2022
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/114885/1/114885.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/114885/
http://ethesis.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/18199
_version_ 1825162394852130816
score 13.239859