In-situ fatigue life prognosis for composite laminates based on stiffness degradation

2015 ◽  
Vol 132 ◽  
pp. 155-165 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tishun Peng ◽  
Yongming Liu ◽  
Abhinav Saxena ◽  
Kai Goebel
2018 ◽  
Vol 52 (27) ◽  
pp. 3803-3818 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Khay ◽  
AD Ngo ◽  
R Ganesan

The purpose of this paper is to study the hygrothermal effect on fatigue behavior of quasi-isotropic carbon/epoxy plain weave aerospace laminates containing artificial flaw under axial tension–tension loading. Dry and wet specimens were tested at tensile load-controlled cyclic loading with a stress ratio R = 0.1 and a load frequency of 7 Hz at room temperature (RT) and at 82℃ under different stress levels. Allowable stiffness change as a failure criterion was used to determine the delamination propagation onset threshold under cyclic tensile loading at each environmental condition. The delamination propagation onset was verified using the ultrasonic imaging (C-Scan) technique. The experimental results show that (1) fatigue life of CFRP specimens was more individually affected by moisture than by temperature and (2) combined moisture and temperature cause a drastic decrease in fatigue life. Finally, an investigation of the effect of hygrothermal conditions on stiffness degradation and damage of composite laminates subjected to tensile fatigue loading has been also carried. On the basis of the residual stiffness degradation, a damage variable was presented and phenomenological damage models were proposed by employing fatigue modulus and secant modulus concepts as measure of material damage.


2021 ◽  
pp. 136943322199249
Author(s):  
Xing Li ◽  
Jiwen Zhang ◽  
Jun Cheng

This paper presents fatigue behaviors and the stiffness degradation law of concrete continuous beams with external prestressed carbon fiber-reinforced polymer (CFRP) tendons. Three specimens were tested under fatigue loading, and the influence of different load levels on the stiffness degradation and fatigue life were studied, and it was found that the stiffness degradation of three test specimens exhibited a three-stage change rule, namely rapid decrease, stable degradation, and sharp decline, but there are obvious differences in the rate and amplitude of stiffness degradation. The load level has a significant influence on the fatigue life of the test specimens. An analytical model with load level considered was proposed to calculate the residual stiffness and predict the stiffness degradation, which is in good agreement with the test results. The model of stiffness degradation presents a possible solution for practical engineering applications of concrete continuous beams with externally prestressed CFRP tendons subjected to different fatigue loadings.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
ALEXANDER D. SNYDER ◽  
ZACHARY J. PHILLIPS ◽  
JASON F. PATRICK

Fiber-reinforced polymer composites are attractive structural materials due to their high specific strength/stiffness and excellent corrosion resistance. However, the lack of through-thickness reinforcement in laminated composites creates inherent susceptibility to fiber-matrix debonding, i.e., interlaminar delamination. This internal damage mode has proven difficult to detect and nearly impossible to repair via conventional methods, and therefore, remains a significant factor limiting the reliability of composite laminates in lightweight structures. Thus, novel approaches for mitigation (e.g., self-healing) of this incessant damage mode are of tremendous interest. Self-healing strategies involving sequestration of reactive liquids, i.e. microcapsule and microvascular systems, show promise for the extending service- life of laminated composites. However, limited heal cycles, long reaction times (hours/days), and variable stability of chemical agents under changing environmental conditions remain formidable research challenges. Intrinsic self- healing approaches that utilize reversible bonds in the host material circumvent many of these limitations and offer the potential for unlimited heal cycles. Here we detail the development of an intrinsic self-healing woven composite laminate based on thermally-induced dynamic bond re-association of 3D-printed polymer interlayers. In contrast to prior work, self-repair of the laminate occurs in situ and below the glass-transition temperature of the epoxy matrix, and maintains >85% of the elastic modulus during healing. This new platform has been deployed in both glass and carbon-fiber composites, demonstrating application versatility. Remarkably, up to 20 rapid (minute-scale) self-healing cycles have been achieved with healing efficiencies hovering 100% of the interlayer toughened (4-5x) composite laminate. This latest self-healing advancement exhibits unprecedented potential for perpetual in-service repair along with material multi-functionality (e.g., deicing ability) to meet modern application demands.


2008 ◽  
Vol 199 (1-3) ◽  
pp. 199-205 ◽  
Author(s):  
E.A. Adda-bedia ◽  
M. Bouazza ◽  
A. Tounsi ◽  
A. Benzair ◽  
M. Maachou

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