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Weight reduction in automobile structures: an experimental study on torsional stiffness of box sections

Weight reduction in automobile structures: an experimental study on torsional stiffness of box sections
Weight reduction in automobile structures: an experimental study on torsional stiffness of box sections
Torsional rigidity is an important performance related property of an automotive body-in-white (BIW) structure, which consists of many box hat structures or box sections. An experimental study has been carried out to determine mainly the torsional stiffness but also the elastic limit and the strength of spot-welded and adhesively bonded (and weld-bonded) box sections. The relative contribution of a variety of factors, including joining system used, steel strength, sheet thickness, section area and section design, to the properties of box sections was analysed using factorial design experimentation techniques. It was found that a significant increase in torsional stiffness could be achieved by changing the joining technique, increasing the sheet thickness, increasing the section area and, to a lesser extent, changing the section design. The results are examined and discussed in the context of weight reduction in automotive structures.

weight reduction, automotive structures, box sections, torsional stiffness
0954-4070
59-71
Pine, T.
d55bc6ec-df80-4265-9427-824ffef671bb
Lee, M.M.K.
b0eec6ec-1557-494d-bbc5-4cd053cfbe46
Jones, T.B.
7ebd445d-ef68-42a1-b498-8a62c22f566e
Pine, T.
d55bc6ec-df80-4265-9427-824ffef671bb
Lee, M.M.K.
b0eec6ec-1557-494d-bbc5-4cd053cfbe46
Jones, T.B.
7ebd445d-ef68-42a1-b498-8a62c22f566e

Pine, T., Lee, M.M.K. and Jones, T.B. (1999) Weight reduction in automobile structures: an experimental study on torsional stiffness of box sections. Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part D: Journal of Automobile Engineering, 213 (1), 59-71. (doi:10.1243/0954407991526685).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Torsional rigidity is an important performance related property of an automotive body-in-white (BIW) structure, which consists of many box hat structures or box sections. An experimental study has been carried out to determine mainly the torsional stiffness but also the elastic limit and the strength of spot-welded and adhesively bonded (and weld-bonded) box sections. The relative contribution of a variety of factors, including joining system used, steel strength, sheet thickness, section area and section design, to the properties of box sections was analysed using factorial design experimentation techniques. It was found that a significant increase in torsional stiffness could be achieved by changing the joining technique, increasing the sheet thickness, increasing the section area and, to a lesser extent, changing the section design. The results are examined and discussed in the context of weight reduction in automotive structures.

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More information

Published date: 1999
Keywords: weight reduction, automotive structures, box sections, torsional stiffness

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 75381
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/75381
ISSN: 0954-4070
PURE UUID: f69bc32a-ed9b-4188-92fd-b9b5714b8e91

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Date deposited: 11 Mar 2010
Last modified: 13 Mar 2024 22:51

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Contributors

Author: T. Pine
Author: M.M.K. Lee
Author: T.B. Jones

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