Effect of stacking sequence and metal volume fraction on the ballistic impact behaviors of ARALL fiber‐metal laminates: An experimental study

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ertan Kosedag ◽  
Murat Aydin ◽  
Recep Ekici
2018 ◽  
Vol 22 (6) ◽  
pp. 1770-1785
Author(s):  
Lei Pan ◽  
Yifan Wang ◽  
Yubing Hu ◽  
Yunfei Lv ◽  
Aamir Ali ◽  
...  

Tensile and flexural properties of aluminum/self-reinforced polypropylene fiber metal laminates (Al/SRPP FMLs) based on 2/1 and 3/2 configurations are investigated in this paper. The Al/SRPP FMLs based on 2/1 configuration exhibit better performance than the Al/SRPP FMLs based on 3/2 configuration in terms of tensile and flexural properties. The metal volume fraction plays an important role in the tensile strength and flexural strength in both Al/SRPP-2/1 FMLs and Al/SRPP-3/2 FMLs. The tensile stress–strain curves of Al/SRPP-2/1FMLs and Al/SRPP-3/2FMLs decline while the ductility of both FMLs enhances as the temperature increases. The elevated temperature intensifies the delamination of the Al/SRPP FMLs, especially for Al/SRPP-3/2FMLs because of possible more manufacture defects. The outer metal cracking and inter-laminar delamination are the main tensile failure mechanisms. However, delamination at the metal/composite interface and breakage of the constituent materials does not occur after the flexural tests.


Author(s):  
A. Seyed Yaghoubi ◽  
B. Liaw

Impact responses and damage induced by a drop-weight instrument on GLARE 5 fiber-metal laminates (FMLs) with different thicknesses were studied. The effect of impactor mass was also considered. The damage characteristics were evaluated using both nondestructive ultrasonic and mechanical sectioning techniques. The ultrasonic C-scan technique could only assess the contour of entire damage area whereas more details of damage were obtained using the mechanical cross-sectioning technique. As expected, thicker GLARE 5 FMLs offered higher impact resistance. When subjected to the same impact energy, the entire damage contour enlarged as the specimen became thicker. Under the same impact condition, by reducing the impactor mass, the contact force escalated while the contact stiffness increased. Experimental results showed that the threshold cracking energy varied parabolically with respect to the impact velocity, metal volume fraction (MVF) and the specimen thickness. By increasing the metal volume fraction of the panels, the threshold cracking energy decreased parabolically. On the other hand, for the same MVF value, the cracking energy increased as the impactor mass increased. By increasing the panel thickness, the threshold cracking energy condition increased parabolically; whereas under the same impact velocity, the threshold cracking energy increased by increasing the impactor mass.


1995 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
pp. 663-671 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. F. Wu ◽  
L. L. Wu ◽  
W. J. Slagter ◽  
J. L. Verolme

2017 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 109-121 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hale Ergun ◽  
Benjamin M Liaw ◽  
Feridun Delale

Monotonic tensile tests are conducted on seven different Glare grades of fiber metal laminates. In-situ stress–strain curves of glass/epoxy laminate interleaved in Glare 2(3/2) are exposed with the application of metal volume fraction method using the stress–strain curves of Glare 2(3/2) and Aluminum 2024-T3 in unidirectional and transverse directions. The strain–stress curves of cross-ply Glares are predicted by the modification of this method with an empirical parameter and a second parameter considering the relative glass/epoxy laminate thickness ratios of Glare grades. Modified metal volume fraction method presented in this study can be used as a preliminary estimation of stress–strain curves of multiple possible fiber metal laminate configurations without testing.


Author(s):  
A. Seyed Yaghoubi ◽  
B. Liaw

In this paper, GLARE 5 fiber-metal laminates (FMLs) of two different geometries: 152.4mm×101.6mm (6″×4″) plate and 254mm×25.4mm (10″×1″) beam and with various thicknesses and stacking sequences were impacted by a 0.22 caliber bullet-shaped projectile using a high-speed gas gun. Velocities of the projectile along the ballistic trajectory were measured at different locations. For both geometries, the incident projectile impact velocity versus the residual velocity was plotted and numerically fitted according to the classical Lambert–Jonas equation for the determination of ballistic limit velocity, V50. The results showed that V50 varied in a parabolic trend with respect to the metal volume fraction (MVF) and the specimen thickness for both geometries. It was found that by changing the geometry from a plate to a beam, the ballistic limit velocity increased. On the other hand, changing the stacking sequence had a less pronounced effect on V50 for both geometries. The quasi-isotropic beam and plate specimens offered relatively higher ballistic limit velocities compared to other types of stacking sequences in their own geometrical groups. Furthermore, the cross-ply and unidirectional beam specimens showed relatively higher V50 compared to their plate counterparts. Experimental results showed that the ballistic limit was almost the same for the quasi-isotropic layup FMLs of both plate and beam geometries.


Author(s):  
P. C. Yeh ◽  
P. Y. Chang ◽  
J. M. Yang ◽  
P. H. Wu ◽  
M. C. Liu

The bearing properties of recently developed hybrid fiber/metal laminates, or COmmingled Boron/glass fiber Reinforced Aluminum laminates (COBRA), are investigated in this study. The bolt-type bearing tests on GLass REinforced aluminum laminates (GLARE), non-commingled hybrid boron/glass/aluminum fiber/metal laminates (HFML) and COBRA were carried out as a function of e/D ratio, metal volume fraction, fiber volume fraction, and fiber orientation. Experimental results show that with the same joint geometry and metal volume fraction, the commingling of boron fibers improves the bearing strength of fiber/metal laminates. The bearing strength of COBRA with longitudinal fibers is lower than that with transverse fibers due to the fact that shearout failure takes place before maximum bearing strength is reached. The experimental results show that, with only either transverse fiber orientation or longitudinal fiber orientation, COBRA with 18% boron fiber volume fraction possesses a higher bearing strength when compared to HFML with 6% boron fiber volume fraction. In addition to the properties in COBRA with parallel-plies commingled prepreg, the bearing properties of various COBRA with [0°/90°] and [0°/90°/90°/0°] cross-ply commingled prepregs are also discussed.


Materials ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 439
Author(s):  
Mingshi Wang ◽  
Jianxun Zhang ◽  
Hui Yuan ◽  
Haoyuan Guo ◽  
Wenbo Zhuang

The plastic behavior in the large deflection response of slender sandwich beams with fiber metal laminate (FML) face sheets and a metal foam core under transverse loading is studied. According to a modified rigid–perfectly plastic material approximation, an analytical model is developed, and simple formulae are obtained for the large deflection response of fully clamped FML sandwich beams, considering the interaction of bending and stretching. Finite element (FE) calculations are conducted, and analytical predictions capture numerical results reasonably in the plastic stage of large deflection. The influences of metal volume fraction, strength ratio of metal to composite layer, core strength, and punch size on the plastic behavior in the large deflection response of FML sandwich beams are discussed. It is suggested that, if the structural behavior of fiber-metal laminate sandwich beams is plasticity dominated, it is similar to that of metal sandwich beams. Moreover, both metal volume fraction and the strength ratio of metal to composite layer are found to be important for the plastic behavior in the large deflection response of fiber metal laminate sandwich beams, while core strength and punch size might have little influence on it.


1995 ◽  
Vol 411 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. S. Mclachlan ◽  
A. B. Pakhomov ◽  
I. I. Oblachova ◽  
F. Brouers ◽  
A. Sarychev

ABSTRACTThe complex conductivity was measured on 3d granular NbC-KCI composite samples at varying metal volume fraction p, frequency ω and temperature above and below the superconductivity critical Tc. The observed frequency dispersion is anomalous in that it is not in accord with the scaling theory of percolation transition. The results are compared with a recently developed scaling theory, which takes both intercluster tunneling and intercluster capacitance into account. The experimental estimates for the new critical exponents are in reasonable agreement with the theory. The very low value of the crossover frequency can also be understood. We also present the data showing the dispersion of the complex conductivity well below the superconducting transition Tc of NbC.


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