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Design, fabrication and testing of sandwich panel decking use in road freight trailers

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Galos, J 
Newaz, G 

Abstract

This paper investigates the potential of sandwich structures in the novel application of road freight trailer decking. Sandwich panels are developed to be lightweight replacements to conventional birch plywood hardwood decking, which is the norm in European road freight trailers. A tailored material selection process is used to identify the most advantageous sandwich panel material combinations with respect to flexural properties and material cost. Sandwich panels with woven glass fibre reinforced polyester and an end-grain balsa are found to be the most advantageous material combination in terms of both raw material cost and mechanical performance. These panels are fabricated using a single shot fabrication technique and are approximately 30% lighter than conventional birch plywood trailer decking. This weight saving corresponds to approximately 165 kg in a standard 13.6 m long European road freight trailer. Three point bend testing has shown that these sandwich panels have superior flexural strength and comparable flexural stiffness to birch plywood. Large panel testing confirmed that these panels can withstand roughly four times the forklift wheel load likely to be seen in-service. The shear properties of two grades of rigid end-grain balsa core are also studied to illustrate the importance of using a higher density balsa core. Practical considerations, such as joining and recyclability, for using sandwich panels in this application are also discussed.

Description

Keywords

sandwich design, applications, decking, road freight, balsa core, flexural testing

Journal Title

Journal of Sandwich Structures & Materials

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1099-6362
1530-7972

Volume Title

Publisher

SAGE Publications
Sponsorship
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/K00915X/1)
Centre for Sustainable Road Freight, Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (Grant ID: EP/K00915X/1)