Abstract

For brittle fracture behaviour of carbon fibre reinforced plastics (CFRP) under compression, several approaches exist, which describe different mechanisms during failure, especially at stress intensifications. The failure process is not only initiated by the buckling fibres, but a shear driven fibre compressive failure beneficiaries or initiates the formation of fibres into a kink-band. Starting from this kink-band further damage can be detected, which leads to the final failure. The subject of this work is an experimental investigation on the influence of ply thickness and stacking sequence in quasi-isotropic CFRP laminates containing stress intensifications under compression loading. Different effects that influence the compression failure and the role the stacking sequence has on damage development and the resulting compressive strength are identified and discussed. The influence of stress intensifications is investigated in detail at a hole in open hole compression (OHC) tests. A proposed interrupted test approach allows identifying the mechanisms of damage initiation and propagation from the free edge of the hole by causing a distinct damage state and examine it at a precise instant of time during fracture process. Compression after impact (CAI) tests are executed in order to compare the OHC results to a different type of stress intensifications. Unnotched compression tests are carried out for comparison as a reference. With this approach, a more detailed description of the failure mechanisms during the sudden compression failure of CFRP is achieved. By microscopic examination of single plies from various specimens, the different effects that influence the compression failure are identified. First damage of fibres occurs always in 0°-ply. Fibre shear failure leads to local microbuckling and the formation and growth of a kink-band as final failure mechanisms. The formation of a kink-band and finally steady state kinking is shifted to higher compressive strains with decreasing ply thickness. Final failure mode in laminates with stress intensification depends on ply thickness. In thick or inner plies, damage initiates as shear failure and fibre buckling into the drilled hole. The kink-band orientation angle is changing with increasing strain. In outer or thin plies shear failure of single fibres is observed as first damage and the kink-band orientation angle is constant until final failure. Decreasing ply thickness increases the unnotched compressive strength. When stress intensifications are present, the position of the 0°-layer is critical for stability under compression and is thus more important than the ply thickness. Central 0°-layers show best results for OHC and CAI strength due to higher bending stiffness and better supporting effect of the adjacent layers.

Highlights

  • In many applications fibre reinforced plastics (FRP) and especially carbon fibre reinforced plastics (CFRP) are increasingly used for weight optimization due to their density specific mechanical properties

  • When stress intensifications are present, the position of the 0°-layer is critical for stability under compression and is more important than the ply thickness

  • The UD prepreg HexPly-M21/34%/UD194/T800S (Hexcel, Stade, Germany) is used for producing specimens for unnotched compression (UNC), open hole compression (OHC) and compression after impact (CAI) tests with a quasi-isotropic lay-up of [45°n /0°n /−45°n /90°n ]ms and [45°n /90°n /−45°n /0°n ]ms, with n = 1, 3 and m = 3, 1 respectively, in order to investigate the influence of both, the layer thickness and the position of the 0°-layers

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Summary

Introduction

In many applications fibre reinforced plastics (FRP) and especially carbon fibre reinforced plastics (CFRP) are increasingly used for weight optimization due to their density specific mechanical properties. Their sudden and brittle failure behaviour and the complex damage mechanisms involved require often conservative design. The first model for predicting compressive strength of composite laminates was presented by Rosen [1] He proposed that compressive failure initiates due to fibre microbuckling and distinguished between two modes of microbuckling: in-phase microbuckling (shear mode) for higher and out-of-phase microbuckling (extension mode) for lower fibre volume fractions [1]. Moran et al [2] and Poulsen et al [3]

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