| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 7892166 | Composites Part A: Applied Science and Manufacturing | 2015 | 33 Pages | 
Abstract
												An extensive experimental program was carried out to investigate and understand the sequence of damage development throughout the life of open-hole composite laminates loaded in tension-tension fatigue. Quasi-isotropic carbon/epoxy laminates, with stacking sequence [452/902/â452/02]S, [45/90/â45/0]2S and [45/90/â45/0]4S were examined. These were selected on the basis that under quasi-static loading the [452/902/â452/02]S configuration exhibited a delamination dominated mode of failure whilst the [45/90/â45/0]2S and [45/90/â45/0]4S configurations showed a fibre dominated failure mode, previously described as “pull-out” and “brittle” respectively. Specimens were fatigue loaded to 1 Ã 106 cycles or catastrophic failure, which ever occurred first. A number of tests were interrupted at various points as the stiffness dropped with increasing cycles, which were inspected using X-ray computed tomography (CT) scanning. A static residual strength program was carried out for run-out specimens of each configuration.
											Related Topics
												
													Physical Sciences and Engineering
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											Authors
												O.J. Nixon-Pearson, S.R. Hallett, 
											