Abstract

Abstract In this work, the damage accumulation and failure mechanism of glass fiber-reinforced epoxy composite laminates under repeated low velocity impacts were studied considering the influence of stacking sequence. The typical sandwich-like [0°2/90°2]s, angle-ply [±45°]2s and quasi-isotropic [0°/−45°/45°/90°]s laminates were tested at 20 J impact energy. The impact responses including contact force–time/central displacement and energy–time curves were recorded. The tendencies of the peak contact force, maximum displacement, bending stiffness, and energy dissipation with the increase in impact number were analyzed. Damage induced in the laminates was further evaluated. The results show that the impact resistance of the sandwich-like laminate is the weakest with the lowest peak load and the highest energy dissipation. The impact resistance of the quasi-isotropic laminate is better relative to the angle-ply laminate before the occurrence of fiber breakage, whereas the damage tolerance of the angle-ply laminate is higher with relatively slower damage accumulation at subsequent impacts.

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