Abstract

We investigate the compressive failure mechanisms in flax fiber composites, a promising eco-friendly alternative to synthetic composite materials, both numerically and experimentally, and explain their low compressive-compared-to-tensile strength, the compressive-to-tensile strength ratio being 0.28−0.6. We present a novel thermodynamically consistent continuum damage micromechanics model capturing events on the fiber-matrix scale. It describes the microstructure of a unidirectional composite and includes the instantaneous constitutive behavior of matrix and fibers. We show that flax fibers behave as elastic-plastic-damaged solids in compression. Furthermore, we show that fiber damage plays an utmost role in the compressive failure of flax fiber composites – it is a major determinant of the material's compressive stress-strain response. Using X-ray Computed Tomography (XCT) and Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM), we identify the fiber damage as intra-technical fiber splitting and elementary fiber crushing. Due to microstructural similarities among natural fibers, the same micro-mechanisms are likely to appear in other bio-based fibers and their composites.

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