Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
7890751 Composites Part A: Applied Science and Manufacturing 2016 24 Pages PDF
Abstract
Unidirectional (UD) carbon fibre reinforced polymers offer high specific strength and stiffness but they fail in a catastrophic manner with little warning. Gas-texturing and non-constrained annealing were used to introduce fibre waviness into UD polyamide 12 composites produced by wet-impregnation hoping to produce composites with a more gradual failure mode and increased failure strain. Both methods increased the variation of fibre alignment angle compared to the control samples. The composites containing wavy fibres exhibited a stepwise, gradual failure mode under strain controlled uniaxial tension rather than a catastrophic failure, observed in control samples. Gas-texturing damaged the fibres resulting in a decrease of the tensile strength and strain to failure, which resulted in composites with lower tensile strength and ultimate failure strain than the control composites. Non-constrained annealing of carbon fibre/PA-12 produced wavy fibre composites with ultimate failure strain of 2%, significantly higher than 1.6% of the control composite.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Ceramics and Composites
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