Abstract

Polymer composite tubes can be designed to absorb high levels of impact energy by progressive crushing. When a tube is crushed onto a flat platen, energy is absorbed by bending failure of the plies, delamination and friction mechanisms. In the present work, significant increases in energy absorption are shown when a shear mode of failure is initiated by crushing the tube onto a radiused plug (or initiator). A study of plug radius, R, normalised with respect to the tube wall thickness, t, in the range of 0⩽ R/ t⩽5 for circular tube diameter/thickness ratios of 10< D/ t<33 was undertaken with continuous filament random mat glass/polyester composite. Different radii plugs lead to significantly different deformed shapes and crush zone morphologies. Large radius initiators ( R/ t>2) cause the tubes to split and energy is absorbed primarily through friction and axial splitting. As the initiator radius decreases, the amount of through-thickness shear damage in the fronds increases along with specific energy absorption (SEA). When the plug radius becomes small compared to the wall thickness ( R/ t<0.75) a debris wedge forms between the initiator and the tube and acts like a larger radius initiator. The highest energy absorption was seen to occur at R/ t⩽1 when through-thickness shear damage was induced. In this range, under static loading conditions, SEA was seen to be higher than that for tubes crushed onto a flat platen.

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