Evaluating Rigid and Semi-Flexible Fiber Orientation Evolution Models in Simple Flows

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gregory M. Lambert ◽  
Donald G. Baird

As American vehicle fuel efficiency requirements have become more stringent due to the CAFE standards, the auto industry has turned to fiber reinforced polymer composites as replacements for metal parts to reduce weight while simultaneously maintaining established safety standards. Furthermore, these composites may be easily processed using established techniques such as injection molding and compression molding. The mechanical properties of these composites are dependent on, among other variables, the orientation of the fibers within the part. Several models have been proposed to correlate fiber orientation with the kinematics of the polymer matrix during processing, each using various strategies to account for fiber interactions and fiber flexing. However, these all require the use of empirical fitting parameters. Previous work has obtained these parameters by fitting to orientation data at a specific location in an injection-molded part. This ties the parameters to the specific mold design used. Obtaining empirical parameters is not a trivial undertaking and adds significant time to the entire mold design process. Considering that new parameters must be obtained any time some aspect of the part or mold is changed, an alternative technique that obtains model parameters independent of the mold design could be advantageous. This paper continues work looking to obtain empirical parameters from rheological tests. During processing, the fiberpolymer suspension is subjected to a complex flow with both shear and extensional behavior. Rather than use a complex flow, this study seeks to isolate and compare the effects of shear and extension on two orientation models. To this end, simple shear and planar extension are employed and the evolution of orientation from a planar random initial condition is tracked as a function of strain. Simple shear was imparted using a sliding plate rheometer designed and fabricated in-house. A novel rheometer tool was developed and fabricated in-house to impart planar extension using a lubricated squeeze flow technique, where a low viscosity Newtonian lubricant is applied to the solid boundaries to minimize the effect of shearing due to the no-slip boundary condition. The Folgar-Tucker model with a strain reduction factor is used as a rigid fiber model and compared against a Bead-Rod model (a semi-flexible model) proposed by Ortman. Both models are capable of predicting the data, with the Bead-Rod model performing slightly better. Orientation occurs at a much faster rate under startup of planar extension, and also attains a much higher degree of flow alignment when compared with startup of steady shear.

Author(s):  
Gregory M. Lambert ◽  
Donald G. Baird

As American vehicle fuel efficiency requirements have become more stringent due to the CAFE standards, the auto industry has turned to fiber reinforced polymer composites as replacements for metal parts to reduce weight while simultaneously maintaining established safety standards. Furthermore, these composites may be easily processed using established techniques such as injection molding and compression molding. The mechanical properties of these composites are dependent on, among other variables, the orientation of the fibers within the part. Several models have been proposed to correlate fiber orientation with the kinematics of the polymer matrix during processing, each using various strategies to account for fiber interactions and fiber flexing. However, these all require the use of empirical fitting parameters. Previous work has obtained these parameters by fitting to orientation data at a specific location in an injection-molded part. This ties the parameters to the specific mold design used. Obtaining empirical parameters is not a trivial undertaking and adds significant time to the entire mold design process. Considering that new parameters must be obtained any time some aspect of the part or mold is changed, an alternative technique that obtains model parameters independent of the mold design could be advantageous. This paper continues work looking to obtain empirical parameters from rheological tests. During processing, the fiber–polymer suspension is subjected to a complex flow with both shear and extensional behavior. Rather than use a complex flow, this study seeks to isolate and compare the effects of shear and extension on two orientation models. To this end, simple shear and planar extension are employed, and the evolution of orientation from a planar random initial condition is tracked as a function of strain. Simple shear was imparted using a sliding plate rheometer designed and fabricated in-house. A novel rheometer tool was developed and fabricated in-house to impart planar extension using a lubricated squeeze flow technique, where a low-viscosity Newtonian lubricant is applied to the solid boundaries to minimize the effect of shearing due to the no-slip boundary condition. The Folgar–Tucker model with a strain reduction factor is used as a rigid fiber model and compared against a bead–rod model (a semiflexible model) proposed by Ortman. Both models are capable of predicting the data, with the bead–rod model performing slightly better. Orientation occurs at a much faster rate under startup of planar extension and also attains a much higher degree of flow alignment when compared with startup of steady shear.


2017 ◽  
Vol 29 (12) ◽  
pp. 121608 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gregory Lambert ◽  
Peter Wapperom ◽  
Donald Baird

2015 ◽  
Vol 52 (5) ◽  
pp. 599-608 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Hong ◽  
C.W.W. Ng ◽  
L.Z. Wang

Excavations in clay overlying an aquifer may cause catastrophic basal failure due to hydraulic uplift. Although case histories with hydraulic uplift failures are reported worldwide from time to time, the initiation and failure mechanism of the base instability are not well studied and understood. To address these two issues, dimensional analysis is firstly conducted to propose dimensionless groups (DGs) possibly relevant to this subject. Effects of these DGs on the initiation and failure mechanism of base instability are then investigated, by carrying out a series of finite element analyses, in which constitutive models and model parameters have been previously validated against centrifuge test results. It is revealed that the initiation and failure mechanism of base instability due to hydraulic uplift is mainly governed by a ratio of excavation width over the thickness of soft clay inside excavation (B/D). As excavation becomes narrower (i.e., B/D decreases), the hydraulic pressure (Pi) required to initiate uplift movement of clay inside excavation increases significantly (maximum percentage increase = 50%), due to increased effect of downward shear stress acting along soil–wall interface on basal resistance. Based on the parametric study, a calculation chart is developed for estimating Pi of excavations with varied B/D and undrained shear strength of clay. At basal failure caused by hydraulic uplift, the dominant failure mode changes from simple shear in relatively narrow excavations (i.e., B/D < 4) to combined modes of triaxial compression, triaxial extension, and simple shear in relatively wide excavations (i.e., B/D > 4).


2010 ◽  
Vol 165 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 110-119 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aaron P.R. Eberle ◽  
Gregorio M. Vélez-García ◽  
Donald G. Baird ◽  
Peter Wapperom

1997 ◽  
Vol 41 (3) ◽  
pp. 491-511 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. A. Ericsson ◽  
S. Toll ◽  
J.-A. E. Månson

2020 ◽  
Vol 54 (28) ◽  
pp. 4525-4534 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arnab Chanda ◽  
Subhodip Chatterjee ◽  
Vivek Gupta

Soft tissues are complex anisotropic composite systems comprising of multiple differently oriented layers of fiber embedded within a soft matrix. To date, soft tissues have been mainly characterized using simplified linear elastic material models, isotropic viscoelastic and hyperelastic models, and transversely isotropic models. In such models, the effect of fiber volume fraction (FVF), fiber orientation, and fiber-matrix interactions are missing, inhibiting accurate characterization of anisotropic tissue properties. The current work addresses this literature gap with the development of a novel soft composite based material framework to model tissue anisotropy. In this model, the fiber and matrix are considered as separate hyperelastic materials, and fiber-matrix interaction is modeled using multiplicative decomposition of the deformation gradient. The effect of the individual contribution of the fibers and matrix are introduced into the numerical framework for a single soft composite layer, and fiber orientation effects are incorporated into the strain energy functions. Also, strain energy formulations are developed for multiple soft composite layers with varying fiber orientations and contributions, describing the biomechanical behavior of an entire anisotropic tissue block. Stress-strain relationships were derived from the strain energy equations for a uniaxial mechanical test condition. To validate the model parameters, experimental models of soft composites tested under uniaxial tension were characterized using the novel anisotropic hyperelastic model (R2 = 0.983). To date, such a robust anisotropic hyperelastic composite framework has not been developed, which would be indispensable for experimental characterization of tissues and for improving the fidelity of computational biological models in future.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 109
Author(s):  
Armin Kech ◽  
Susanne Kugler ◽  
Tim Osswald

This study aims to evaluate how fiber orientation results are dependent on fluctuations in input parameters, such as the average fiber length, fiber volume content, and initial alignment of fibers. The range of parameters is restricted to deviations within one specific short fiber reinforced thermoplastic and is not set up to investigate the differences between materials. The evaluation was conducted by a virtual shear cell based on a mechanistic modeling approach. The fiber orientation prediction model discussed is the pARD-RSC (principal anisotropic rotary diffusion-reduced strain closure) model implemented as a user routine in AUTODESK MOLDFLOW INSIGHT® (AMI®). The material investigated was discontinuous short glass fiber reinforced PBT (polybutylene-terephthalate), which is often used for housings in various industries. It is shown that variation in the input parameters, although having an influence on the fiber orientation model parameters, only affects the final orientation moderately.


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