The energy absorption of damaged braided and non-crimp fibre composite material structures

The effects of pre-existing damage on the mode of failure and energy absorption characteristics of Non-Crimp Fabric (NCF) and biaxially braided tubular sections under axial loading were considered. Loading rate effects were incorporated by testing at quasi-static rates and impact rates up to 7ms-1 a...

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Main Author: Bottome, Kristofer John
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10173/
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author Bottome, Kristofer John
author_facet Bottome, Kristofer John
author_sort Bottome, Kristofer John
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The effects of pre-existing damage on the mode of failure and energy absorption characteristics of Non-Crimp Fabric (NCF) and biaxially braided tubular sections under axial loading were considered. Loading rate effects were incorporated by testing at quasi-static rates and impact rates up to 7ms-1 and the pre-existing damage was simulated through stress concentrations and out-of-plane impact damage. Circular and square geometries were tested, and a range of NCF and braided fibre architectures were investigated. A number of failure modes were exhibited. NCF tubes were seen to splay at static and impact rates; at impact rates a reduction in Specific Energy Absorption (SEA) was recorded. Braided tubes failed in a combination of buckling and splaying at static rates. Under dynamic conditions all braided samples splayed and where a change in failure mode was seen, SEA was increased. Both NCF and biaxially braided tubes have been shown to offer a much lower SEA than Continuous Filament Random Mat (CoFRM) samples. A threshold size of damage was observed, where, typically, below that threshold the SEA was unaffected by the damage, and above that size the tube would fail globally. The NCF tubes exhibited an improved damage tolerance over CoFRM and braided samples. The braided tubes showed a poor damage tolerance at quasi-static rates although results suggest that the architectures with high axial fibre content will have a higher damage tolerance. It has been shown that modelling damaged areas of tubes as a cut-out is a conservative approach to finding failure levels. Peak stress was seen to be the dominant factor in determining loading at global failure as samples could fail even though the crushing stress is less than the failure stress. Previous work upon Interlaminar Shear Strength (ILSS) and SEA has been investigated and shown to overestimate energy absorption for tubular specimens and found to apply only to samples that fail by progressive crush or fragmentation; for those that do fail in this mode a link between ILSS and SEA has been stated. A technique for determining SEA and for predicting the effect of a SCF on failure mode of composite tubes has been proposed using UCS (Ultimate Compressive Strength) data and SCF (Stress Concentration Factor) data.
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spelling nottingham-101732025-02-28T11:07:22Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10173/ The energy absorption of damaged braided and non-crimp fibre composite material structures Bottome, Kristofer John The effects of pre-existing damage on the mode of failure and energy absorption characteristics of Non-Crimp Fabric (NCF) and biaxially braided tubular sections under axial loading were considered. Loading rate effects were incorporated by testing at quasi-static rates and impact rates up to 7ms-1 and the pre-existing damage was simulated through stress concentrations and out-of-plane impact damage. Circular and square geometries were tested, and a range of NCF and braided fibre architectures were investigated. A number of failure modes were exhibited. NCF tubes were seen to splay at static and impact rates; at impact rates a reduction in Specific Energy Absorption (SEA) was recorded. Braided tubes failed in a combination of buckling and splaying at static rates. Under dynamic conditions all braided samples splayed and where a change in failure mode was seen, SEA was increased. Both NCF and biaxially braided tubes have been shown to offer a much lower SEA than Continuous Filament Random Mat (CoFRM) samples. A threshold size of damage was observed, where, typically, below that threshold the SEA was unaffected by the damage, and above that size the tube would fail globally. The NCF tubes exhibited an improved damage tolerance over CoFRM and braided samples. The braided tubes showed a poor damage tolerance at quasi-static rates although results suggest that the architectures with high axial fibre content will have a higher damage tolerance. It has been shown that modelling damaged areas of tubes as a cut-out is a conservative approach to finding failure levels. Peak stress was seen to be the dominant factor in determining loading at global failure as samples could fail even though the crushing stress is less than the failure stress. Previous work upon Interlaminar Shear Strength (ILSS) and SEA has been investigated and shown to overestimate energy absorption for tubular specimens and found to apply only to samples that fail by progressive crush or fragmentation; for those that do fail in this mode a link between ILSS and SEA has been stated. A technique for determining SEA and for predicting the effect of a SCF on failure mode of composite tubes has been proposed using UCS (Ultimate Compressive Strength) data and SCF (Stress Concentration Factor) data. 2006 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10173/1/thesis2005.pdf Bottome, Kristofer John (2006) The energy absorption of damaged braided and non-crimp fibre composite material structures. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Non-Crimp Fabrics Braided composites Biaxial braid Impact damage stress concentrations energy absorption Compression After Impact CAI structural composites low-velocity impact Crash energy automotive composites
spellingShingle Non-Crimp Fabrics
Braided composites
Biaxial braid
Impact damage
stress concentrations
energy absorption
Compression After Impact
CAI
structural composites
low-velocity impact
Crash energy
automotive composites
Bottome, Kristofer John
The energy absorption of damaged braided and non-crimp fibre composite material structures
title The energy absorption of damaged braided and non-crimp fibre composite material structures
title_full The energy absorption of damaged braided and non-crimp fibre composite material structures
title_fullStr The energy absorption of damaged braided and non-crimp fibre composite material structures
title_full_unstemmed The energy absorption of damaged braided and non-crimp fibre composite material structures
title_short The energy absorption of damaged braided and non-crimp fibre composite material structures
title_sort energy absorption of damaged braided and non-crimp fibre composite material structures
topic Non-Crimp Fabrics
Braided composites
Biaxial braid
Impact damage
stress concentrations
energy absorption
Compression After Impact
CAI
structural composites
low-velocity impact
Crash energy
automotive composites
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10173/