Abstract

The characterization of the time-dependent deformation of fiber-reinforced polymer laminates is critical when evaluating the reliability of composite structures over long-term service lifetime. Several isothermal tensile creep tests under different temperatures and mechanical load levels for two types of carbon fiber-reinforced epoxy composite laminates are conducted in this work. The results indicate that the composites deformed in a time-dependent way and their axial strains are non-monotonic, which implies that both the creep temperature effect and physical aging effect come into play and the creep deformation was affected by the physical aging within the range of loads and temperatures involved in the tests. To formulate this kind of time-dependent behavior, a phenomenological nonlinear viscoelastic constitutive model of single-integral form was proposed and the effective time theory was introduced to describe the effects of temperature, stress, and physical aging. The measured strain was departed into two parts, one is the creep strain and the other is caused by the physical aging effect. The model was implemented within a finite element software by employing a recursive-iterative algorithm and was verified by comparing the simulation results with the experimental ones.

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