6533b831fe1ef96bd1299780

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Micromechanisms of load transfer in a unidirectional carbon fibre–reinforced epoxy composite due to fibre failures. Part 2: Influence of viscoelastic and plastic matrices on the mechanisms of load transfer

Alain ThionnetAlain ThionnetSébastien BlassiauSébastien BlassiauAnthony R. Bunsell

subject

Materials scienceDelaminationComposite number02 engineering and technologyEpoxy021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyViscoelasticityFinite element methodStress fieldMatrix (mathematics)020303 mechanical engineering & transports0203 mechanical engineeringvisual_artPlastic hingeCeramics and Compositesvisual_art.visual_art_mediumComposite material0210 nano-technologyCivil and Structural Engineering

description

A local three-dimensional (3D) finite element analysis (FEA), of the mechanisms governing composite damage (in the region around a fibre break), has been carried out. The model considers viscoelastic and plastic matrix behaviours with and without debonding at the broken fibre/matrix interface. The finite element analysis has shown that even a simple viscoelastic law describing the behaviour of the epoxy resin leads to an increasing load on the neighbouring intact fibres, as a function of time. The plastic behaviour of the matrix has been shown to have consequences on reloading after unloading. In contrast to other studies reported in the literature, the calculations were carried out on different representative 3D unit cells, corresponding to different states of composite damage. In this way, the usual limitations of the finite element approach have been overcome as the number of fibres considered has not been restricted to only the fibres nearest to the broken fibre and the evaluation of the stress field is more accurate. This study follows a previous study (Part 1) which considered the behaviour of a unidirectional composite consisting of both elastic fibres and matrix which is used to validate the approach taken in the present paper.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.compstruct.2005.04.029