Abstract

In this paper, a multi-scale computational analysis is conducted based on representative volume element (RVE) modeling and molecular dynamics (MD) simulation of a carbon fiber-reinforced polymer composite micropillar. The fiber distribution in the micropillar was obtained from a specimen manufactured for real micropillar mechanical testing. Based on the failure modes directly observed from the micropillar testing, the RVE model aims to capture the major failure mechanism, which is the fiber/matrix interface failure of the composite. In the finite element model, the properties of each individual phase, namely, the fiber and the matrix are first identified. Then, cohesive elements are incorporated into the interphase region between the fiber and matrix to capture the interphase debonding. Finally, the global stress–strain relation of the composites is obtained and compared to experimental results. A good correlation was found. Due to convergence difficulties associated with stiffness degradation, the simulation was performed in the commercial software ABAQUS/Explicit. A Molecular dynamics simulation is performed to investigate the stress–strain relation and shear strength of carbon fiber-reinforced polymer composites at nanoscale. The compressive strength and stiffness obtained from MD simulation were lower than that observed from experiments. Interface debonding is a critical failure mode, of which the failure strength is determined from fiber pull-out simulation. The results can be used in RVE simulation to deduce the interphase properties. The modeling method allows the detailed failure mechanisms of the composite microstructure to be captured and a correlation between the micro-properties and macro-properties of the material to be established.

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