Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
252037 Composite Structures 2013 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

In this paper, a novel numerical–experimental methodology is outlined to determine cohesive stress and damage evolution parameters for pristine as well as isothermally aged (in air) polymer matrix composites. A rate-dependent viscoelastic cohesive layer model was implemented in an in-house test-bed finite element analysis (FEA) code to simulate the delamination initiation and propagation in unidirectional polymer composites before and after aging. To determine the model parameters, double cantilever beam (DCB) experiments were conducted on both pristine and isothermally aged IM-7/bismaleimide (BMI) composite specimens. The J-integral approach was adapted to extract cohesive stresses near the crack tip. A principal-stretch dependent internal damage state variable defines the damage in the cohesive layer. Within the cohesive layer, pristine and cohesive stresses were compared to estimate the damage parameters.Once the damage parameters had been characterized, the test-bed FEA code employed a micromechanics based viscoelastic cohesive layer model to simulate interlaminar delamination. The present cohesive-layer based FEA model was able to accurately predict not only the macro-level load–displacement curve, but also the micro-level crack growth history in IM-7/BMI laminate before and after thermal aging.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Civil and Structural Engineering
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