Publication | Open Access
In-Situ Observations of Longitudinal Compression Damage in Carbon-Epoxy Cross Ply Laminates Using Fast Synchrotron Radiation Computed Tomography
12
Citations
5
References
2017
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringMechanical EngineeringThermoplastic CompositeDamage MechanismStructural IntegrityContinuous-fibre CompositeKink Band InclinationLongitudinal Compression DamageMaterials ScienceFibre-reinforced PlasticStrain LocalizationKink BandComposite TechnologyFiber-reinforced CompositeIn-situ ObservationsCrack FormationStructural MechanicsDynamic Crack PropagationKink BandsMechanics Of MaterialsFracture Mechanics
The role of longitudinal compressive failure mechanisms in notched cross-ply laminates is studied experimentally with in-situ synchrotron radiation based computed tomography. Carbon/epoxy specimens loaded monotonically in uniaxial compression exhibited a quasi-stable failure process, which was captured with computed tomography scans recorded continuously with a temporal resolutions of 2.4 s and a spatial resolution of 1.1 μm/voxel. A detailed chronology of the initiation and propagation of longitudinal matrix splitting cracks, in-plane and out-of-plane kink bands, shear-driven fiber failure, delamination, and transverse matrix cracks is provided with a focus on kink bands as the dominant failure mechanism. An automatic segmentation procedure is developed to identify the boundary surfaces of a kink band. The segmentation procedure enables 3-dimensional visualization of the kink band and conveys the orientation, inclination, and spatial variation of the kink band. The kink band inclination and length are examined using the segmented data revealing tunneling and spatial variations not apparent from studying the 2-dimensional section data.
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