Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5205550 | Polymer Testing | 2017 | 22 Pages |
Abstract
In this work, fracture mechanisms of a newly developed carbon fiber/epoxy laminate [+75/0/-75]s were assessed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The composite strain-stress curves were plotted with the displacement information simultaneously acquired from both a tensile testing machine crosshead and an extensometer. The strain-stress curve plotted with the displacement data from the machine test showed an average slope change from E1m = 22.783 GPa to E2m = 13.170 GPa on about 65% of the total strain before global failure, while strain-stress curves plotted with displacement data from the extensometer showed one single slope. While results reported in literature related to composite failure mechanisms, where some authors reported a slope change in strain-stress curves associated to progressive failure, experimental evidence in this work for strain-stress curves showed one single slope, indicating that such slope change is related to the strain measuring technique, and not to a progressive failure. The fracture surface was studied, and four main features were observed, which were related to failure mechanisms during the uniaxial test. The identified failure mechanisms occurred on a stage above 93% of the total strain before global failure.
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Authors
Jan Mayén, Arturo Abúndez, Enrique Alcudia, José Antonio Arellano, Jorge ColÃn, Isa Pereyra, Iván Puente-Lee,