Modal analysis of conceptual microsatellite design employing perforated structural components for mass reduction

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...

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Main Authors: Salman Dawood, Sarmad Dawood, Mohd Harithuddin, Ahmad Salahuddin, Harmin, Mohammad Yazdi
Format: Article
Published: MDPI 2021
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/94215/
https://www.mdpi.com/2226-4310/9/1/23
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spelling my.upm.eprints.942152023-05-08T04:50:54Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/94215/ Modal analysis of conceptual microsatellite design employing perforated structural components for mass reduction Salman Dawood, Sarmad Dawood Mohd Harithuddin, Ahmad Salahuddin Harmin, Mohammad Yazdi 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. These patterns included four geometric shapes (diamonds, hexagons, squares, and triangles) implemented onto several components of a structural design for a conceptual satellite, with a parametric design space defined by two scale factors and also two aspect ratio variations. 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 then selected, after having validated the computational methodology through implementing experimental modal analysis on a scaled down physical model of a primary load-bearing component of the structural design. From the findings, a significant mass reduction percentage of 23.15%, utilizing the proposed perforation concept, was achieved in the final parametric design iteration relative to the baseline unperforated case while maintaining the same fundamental frequency. Dynamic loading analysis was also conducted, utilizing both the baseline unperforated and the finalized perforated designs, to check its capability to withstand realistic launch loads through applying quasi-static loads. The findings show that the final perforated design outperformed the baseline unperforated design with respect to the maximum displacements, maximum Von Mises stresses, and also the computed margin of safety. 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. MDPI 2021-01-04 Article PeerReviewed Salman Dawood, Sarmad Dawood and Mohd Harithuddin, Ahmad Salahuddin and Harmin, Mohammad Yazdi (2021) Modal analysis of conceptual microsatellite design employing perforated structural components for mass reduction. Aerospace, 9 (1). art. no. 23. pp. 1-30. ISSN 2226-4310 https://www.mdpi.com/2226-4310/9/1/23 10.3390/aerospace9010023
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/
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. These patterns included four geometric shapes (diamonds, hexagons, squares, and triangles) implemented onto several components of a structural design for a conceptual satellite, with a parametric design space defined by two scale factors and also two aspect ratio variations. 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 then selected, after having validated the computational methodology through implementing experimental modal analysis on a scaled down physical model of a primary load-bearing component of the structural design. From the findings, a significant mass reduction percentage of 23.15%, utilizing the proposed perforation concept, was achieved in the final parametric design iteration relative to the baseline unperforated case while maintaining the same fundamental frequency. Dynamic loading analysis was also conducted, utilizing both the baseline unperforated and the finalized perforated designs, to check its capability to withstand realistic launch loads through applying quasi-static loads. The findings show that the final perforated design outperformed the baseline unperforated design with respect to the maximum displacements, maximum Von Mises stresses, and also the computed margin of safety. 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.
format Article
author Salman Dawood, Sarmad Dawood
Mohd Harithuddin, Ahmad Salahuddin
Harmin, Mohammad Yazdi
spellingShingle Salman Dawood, Sarmad Dawood
Mohd Harithuddin, Ahmad Salahuddin
Harmin, Mohammad Yazdi
Modal analysis of conceptual microsatellite design employing perforated structural components for mass reduction
author_facet Salman Dawood, Sarmad Dawood
Mohd Harithuddin, Ahmad Salahuddin
Harmin, Mohammad Yazdi
author_sort Salman Dawood, Sarmad Dawood
title Modal analysis of conceptual microsatellite design employing perforated structural components for mass reduction
title_short Modal analysis of conceptual microsatellite design employing perforated structural components for mass reduction
title_full Modal analysis of conceptual microsatellite design employing perforated structural components for mass reduction
title_fullStr Modal analysis of conceptual microsatellite design employing perforated structural components for mass reduction
title_full_unstemmed Modal analysis of conceptual microsatellite design employing perforated structural components for mass reduction
title_sort modal analysis of conceptual microsatellite design employing perforated structural components for mass reduction
publisher MDPI
publishDate 2021
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/94215/
https://www.mdpi.com/2226-4310/9/1/23
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