Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1577613 Materials Science and Engineering: A 2012 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

The effect of the substrate material on mode-I fatigue behavior of a toughened epoxy adhesive system was examined in terms of the substrate stiffness and curing residual stress. It was found that a change in adherend material from aluminum to steel caused a reduction in the fatigue performance; i.e. the threshold energy release rate decreased and the crack growth rate increased for a given applied energy release rate. The possibility that these observations were a result of adhesive curing residual stresses was studied experimentally and analytically, but it was found that such effects were relatively small. Finite element modeling showed that the fatigue results could be explained in terms of an increase in the crack tip stresses and an enlarged plastic zone due to the greater modulus of steel compared with aluminum. The local influence of the adherend modulus proved to be much more significant than the global effect of the adherend stiffness (product of modulus and moment of inertia). The effects of adherend modulus are expected to diminish as the phase angle increases.

► Increasing adherend modulus caused mode-I Gth and G at a specific da/dN to decrease. ► The joint strength increased significantly with increasing substrate stiffness. ► Effect of curing residual stresses on the observed difference in fatigue was small. ► Changing the substrate modulus affects the adherend constraint, and thus the fatigue behavior. ► Increasing phase angle reduced the effect of the substrate modulus.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Materials Science (General)
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