Yoshimura buckling

Yoshimura buckling is a triangular mesh buckling pattern found in thin-walled cylinders under axial compression.[1][2]

This buckling pattern is named after Yoshimaru Yoshimura, the Japanese researcher who first provided an explanation for its development in a paper first published in Japan in 1951,[3] and later republished in the United States in 1955.[4]

References

  1. de Vries, J., Research on the Yoshimura buckling pattern of small cylindrical thin walled shells, in Proceedings of the European Conference on Spacecraft Structures, Materials and Mechanical Testing 2005 (ESA SP-581). 10–12 May 2005, Noordwijk, The Netherlands. Edited by Karen Fletcher. Bibcode 2005ESASP.581E..21D
  2. Singer, J.; Arbocz, J.; Weller, T. (2002). Buckling Experiments, Shells, Built-up Structures, Composites and Additional Topics. 2. John Wiley & Sons Ltd. p. 640. ISBN 9780471974505.
  3. Nicholas J. Hoff (February 1966). "The Perplexing Behavior of Thin Circular Cylindrical Shells in Axial Compression". Stanford University Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics.
  4. Yoshimaru Yoshimura (July 1955). "On the mechanism of buckling of a circular cylindrical shell under axial compression". National Advisory Committee For Aeronautics.


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