scholarly journals Stress analysis at the interface of metal-to-metal adhesively bonded joints subjected to 4-point bending: Finite element method

2016 ◽  
Vol 93 (11) ◽  
pp. 855-878 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anil K. Prathuru ◽  
Nadimul H. Faisal ◽  
Sha Jihan ◽  
John A. Steel ◽  
James Njuguna
Materials ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (15) ◽  
pp. 2403 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shiuh-Chuan Her ◽  
Cheng-Feng Chan

The use of adhesively bonded joints in place of traditional joining techniques such as bolted or rivet joints is becoming greatly popular in recent years. Interfacial stress in the adhesive is critical to the strength of adhesively bonded joints. It is necessary to predict the interfacial stresses accurately to ensure the safety of joints. In this work, an analytical model is explicitly presented to evaluate the stresses in a double lap joint. The equilibrium equations in the adhesive overlap region are derived on the basis of elasticity theory. The governing equations are presented in terms of shear and peel stresses in the adhesive. Analytical solutions are derived for the shear and peel stresses, which are considered to be the main reason for the failure of the double lap joint. To verify the analytical solutions, the finite element method is conducted using the commercial package ANSYS. Results from the analytical solution agree well with finite element results and numerical investigations available in the literature. The effect of the adhesive thickness, shear modulus, adherend Young’s modulus and bonding length on the shear and peel stresses in the adhesive of the double lap joint are studied. Numerical results demonstrate that both the maximum shear and peel stress occur at both ends of the bonding region. The maximum values of the shear and peel stresses increase as the adhesive thickness decreases and as the adhesive shear modulus increases provided that the adhesive thickness is sufficiently small. The simplicity and capability to obtain analytical expressions of the shear and peel stresses for double lap adhesive bonded joints makes the proposed analytical model applicable for the stress analysis and preliminary structural design.


1988 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 146-170 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Roy ◽  
J. N. Reddy

Abstract A good understanding of the process of adhesion from the mechanics viewpoint and the predictive capability for structural failures associated with adhesively bonded joints require a realistic modeling (both constitutive and kinematic) of the constituent materials. The present investigation deals with the development of an Updated Lagrangian formulation and the associated finite element analysis of adhesively bonded joints. The formulation accounts for the geometric nonlinearity of the adherends and the nonlinear viscoelastic behavior of the adhesive. Sample numerical problems are presented to show the stress and strain distributions in bonded joints.


2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (2020) ◽  
pp. 204-205
Author(s):  
Julio Cesar Goes Neves ◽  
Carlos Augusto Carpanzano Barcellos

2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (1) ◽  
pp. 000246-000258
Author(s):  
Nina S. Dytiuk ◽  
Thomas F. Marinis ◽  
Joseph W. Soucy

Abstract Adhesively bonded joints are ubiquitous in electronic assemblies that are used in a wide range of applications, which include automotive, medical, military, space and communications. The steady drive to reduce the size of assemblies in all of these applications, while providing increased functionality, generates a need for adhesive joints of higher strength, improved thermal and electrical conductivity and better dielectric isolation. All of these attributes of adhesive joints are degraded by the presence of voids in them. The quest to minimize voids in bonded structures motivated a previous study of their formation in a solvent cast, die bond epoxy film, which undergoes a liquid phase transition during cure. That work is extended in this study by including the effects of various filler morphologies in the adhesive. Fillers are added to adhesives to facilitate handling of thin sheet formats, control bond line thickness and reduce coefficient of thermal expansion. As such, fillers are selected to be inert with respect to the adhesive chemistry, while being readily wetted by it in the liquid state. Common filler morphologies include woven and molded open meshes, fibers chopped to uniform length, and spheres of uniform or distributed diameters. Void formation is influenced by a number factors, which include wettability of the bonded surfaces, adsorbed water, amount of solvent retained in the film, volume of entrapped air, thermal profile of the cure schedule, and clamping pressure during cure. The presence of fillers in the adhesive adds the additional factors of constrained diffusion paths and increased area for void nucleation. We have changed our approach to modeling the diffusion of volatile species in adhesive joints from a finite difference calculation in a uniform adhesive medium used previously, to a finite element model of a complex diffusion space. The open source program Gmsh is used to generate the diffusion space from a set of input parameters. The calculations of concentration profiles and diffusion fluxes of volatile species at the void interface are made using the open source finite element program elmer. As done previously, the position of the void interface is updated by integrating the product of time and flux of diffusing species over the area of the interface. The internal pressure of the void is determined by application of the Young-Laplace equation, while Henry’s law is used to estimate the concentration of diffusing species adjacent to the void interface. The calculation proceeds for a time equivalent to the integral of the time temperature product required to achieve a 70% cure state of the adhesive, at which point the void interface is immobile. The experimental approach is the same as used previously, with the filled adhesive sandwiched between glass slides and cured on a hot plate while imaged through a microscope. Images are automatically captured and analyzed by using the open source program imageJ, which allows us to track the evolution of individual voids as well as the time dependent distribution of the void population. We are working to correlate these experimental results with the predictions of our finite element calculations to allow us to make insightful choices of adhesives and optimize our bonding processes.


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