Abstract

Micromechanical models were established to simulate ply cracking in [0/90/0] laminates under tension. A new user-defined material model was developed within a finite element framework to capture inelastic deformation of the matrix and local cavitation-induced and ductile failure. A damage model was used to capture corresponding post-peak behaviour. Representative volume elements (RVEs) of laminates were generated, where the fiber and matrix constituents were explicitly represented in the 90° ply. The experimentally verified simulations revealed local matrix failure onset was governed by brittle cavitation, while subsequent microcracking was influenced by local ductile failure. The model accurately captured the delay in first full ply crack formation for laminates with thinner plies. The role of thermal residual stress, ply constraints, and fiber volume fraction on ply crack formation were investigated. The associated effective energy release rate was predicted and can be used for predicting ply crack multiplication in meso- or macro-scale models.

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