Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7215595 | Composites Science and Technology | 2015 | 23 Pages |
Abstract
The inherent brittleness of continuous unidirectional fibre reinforced composites is a major drawback to their otherwise outstanding mechanical performance. This paper exploits composites with overlapped discontinuities at the ply level to create a significantly non-linear response, due to progressive interlaminar damage under tensile loading. Two distinct configurations were manufactured with the same carbon/epoxy system and tested under quasi-static tension, showing that varying the thickness and length of the overlapping ply blocks resulted in significantly different mechanical responses and failure modes. A previously developed generalised shear-lag model was successfully used to optimise the overlap configuration, and accurately predicted the response in both strength- and toughness-dominated cases. This work demonstrates that unidirectional composites with well-designed discontinuities at the ply level can provide a significantly non-linear response with clear warning before failure, while retaining similar stiffness and up to 50% of the strength of their continuous counterparts.
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Authors
Gergely Czél, Soraia Pimenta, Michael R. Wisnom, Paul Robinson,