Numerical simulation of progressive damage and failure in composite laminates using XFEM/CZM coupled approach

Author(s):  
R. Higuchi ◽  
T. Okabe ◽  
T. Nagashima
2011 ◽  
Vol 21 (6) ◽  
pp. 893-911 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. M. Zhang ◽  
L. Zhao

A progressive damage and failure model for fiber-reinforced laminated composites is developed in combination of finite element procedure and micromechanical model based on a unit cell. The micromechanical model can be used to evaluate failure criteria at the micro-level with fiber and matrix material properties rather than laminate material parameters. Once either of the constituents has damaged, the corresponding material properties are degraded by the damage factor. The micromechanical model and the damage theory are implemented in the finite software to model the damage progression and compute the ultimate strength of the composite laminates containing a hole. The simulation results of this model are compared with a model that is used in the failure criteria at the macro-level. The predicted strengths for both models are furthermore compared with the experimental results, and a well agreement in the simulation and experimental results is revealed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 39 (13-14) ◽  
pp. 499-519
Author(s):  
Wentao He ◽  
Changzi Wang ◽  
Shuqing Wang ◽  
Lu Yao ◽  
Jun Wu ◽  
...  

This work mainly investigates the effects of the hole number and layer direction on the tensile mechanical behavior and failure mechanisms of multihole fiber metal laminates by experimental and numerical methods. With the aid of digital image correlation technique, tensile tests are implemented to obtain mechanical responses of different multihole fiber metal laminates. Subsequently, numerical simulation considering thermal residual stress is conducted to elucidate the failure modes and progressive damage evolution of multihole fiber metal laminates, which integrates the progressive damage model of composite laminates and a cohesive zone model between aluminum sheet/composite laminates. Finally, numerical predictions are found in a good agreement with experimental measurements, in terms of mechanical responses and fracture morphologies. Results demonstrate that the number of holes has negligible influence on the ultimate tensile strength, whereas affects the final failure strain of multihole fiber metal laminates evidently. With the increase of layer direction, the fracture morphology changes from evident brittle fracture to fiber pull-out and matrix damage, which indicates that the critical failure mechanism of multihole fiber metal laminates changes from tension dominated to tension–shear dominated. Additionally, the longer loading history from initial damage to final failure of composite laminates demonstrates the significance of considering progressive damage behavior in numerical simulation.


2011 ◽  
Vol 314-316 ◽  
pp. 2243-2252
Author(s):  
Bo Ming Zhang ◽  
Lin Zhao

A progressive damage and failure model for fiber reinforced laminated composites is developed in combination of finite element procedure and micromechanical model based on a unit cell. The micromechanical model can be used to evaluate failure criteria at the micro-level with fiber and matrix material properties. Once either of the constituents has damaged, the corresponding material properties are degraded by the damage factor. The micromechanical model and the damage theory are implemented in the finite software ABAQUS by using the user material subroutine UMAT and VUMAT, to model the damage progression and compute the ultimate strength of the composite laminates containing a hole. The predicted strengths for this model is compared with the experimental results, and a well agreement in the simulation and experimental resulted is revealed.


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