Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1467191 Composites Part A: Applied Science and Manufacturing 2009 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

A novel composite material is described, where tension, applied to polymeric fibres, is released prior to moulding them into a matrix. On matrix solidification, compressive stresses imparted by the viscoelastically strained fibres improve mechanical properties. Previous studies showed that these viscoelastically prestressed composites had improved impact and tensile properties compared with control (unstressed) counterparts. In the current study, three-point bend tests on composites using nylon 6,6 fibre reinforcement in epoxy and polyester resins have demonstrated that the viscoelastic prestressing effect increases flexural stiffness. From deflections at 5 s and 900 s, using a freely suspended load on large span/thickness ratio (L/h) samples, the flexural modulus was increased by ∼50% relative to control counterparts. Stiffness-increasing mechanisms relating to pre-tensioned fibre and matrix prestress effects are discussed. For small L/h samples (using controlled rate deflection up to ∼5 s), the flexural modulus and resulting increase from viscoelastic prestressing were lower. This is attributed to shear effects and possibly fibre–matrix load transfer mechanisms. By exploiting time–temperature superposition, all samples were aged to the equivalent of 100 years at 20 °C and subsequent bend tests revealed no significant change in the modulus increase resulting from viscoelastic prestressing.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Ceramics and Composites
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