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The main advantages of sandwiches as structural components are now
well known and well-established. Due to the progress in polymer
science and engineering and advances in manufacturing processes,
sandwich structures can blend various functional and structural
properties and therefore lead to highly innovating systems. The
current difficulty to overcome is to provide designers with proper
methodologies and tools that could enable them to design improved
sandwich structures. Such dedicated design tools should be
efficient, reliable, flexible and user-friendly. They should be
based on advanced knowledge of sandwich behaviour at global and
local scales. Such approach relies on our capability to test,
identify, control and model structure performances. The impressive
variety of core and face materials and the rapid developments in
forming processes give new opportunities to design components which
have more complex shapes and higher integrated functional and
structural properties. Interest in sandwiches is permanently
growing in industry and refined testing and modelling approaches
should be encouraged to set up relevant guidelines to design
reliable advanced structures. The European Society for Mechanics
sponsored the EUROMECH 360 Colloquium on the 'Mechanics of Sandwich
Structures' in Saint-Etienne, France, on 13 - 15 May 1997. The main
purpose of EUROMECH 360 was to go into the most recent progresses
in sandwich analysis and design, including mechanical modelling and
testing. It was expected that the Colloquium should contribute to
define new research directions to support development of advanced
applications in strategic industrial sectors such as ground
transportations or building and civil engineering."
The main advantages of sandwiches as structural components are now
well known and well-established. Due to the progress in polymer
science and engineering and advances in manufacturing processes,
sandwich structures can blend various functional and structural
properties and therefore lead to highly innovating systems. The
current difficulty to overcome is to provide designers with proper
methodologies and tools that could enable them to design improved
sandwich structures. Such dedicated design tools should be
efficient, reliable, flexible and user-friendly. They should be
based on advanced knowledge of sandwich behaviour at global and
local scales. Such approach relies on our capability to test,
identify, control and model structure performances. The impressive
variety of core and face materials and the rapid developments in
forming processes give new opportunities to design components which
have more complex shapes and higher integrated functional and
structural properties. Interest in sandwiches is permanently
growing in industry and refined testing and modelling approaches
should be encouraged to set up relevant guidelines to design
reliable advanced structures. The European Society for Mechanics
sponsored the EUROMECH 360 Colloquium on the 'Mechanics of Sandwich
Structures' in Saint-Etienne, France, on 13 - 15 May 1997. The main
purpose of EUROMECH 360 was to go into the most recent progresses
in sandwich analysis and design, including mechanical modelling and
testing. It was expected that the Colloquium should contribute to
define new research directions to support development of advanced
applications in strategic industrial sectors such as ground
transportations or building and civil engineering."
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