Abstract

The reliability and service safety of composite structures are compromised by drilling defects on carbon fiber reinforced polymer (CFRP) materials. However, the synergism effect of different types of drilling defects on the mechanical behavior of structures remains unclear. To address this gap, this study focuses on investigating the intralaminar and interlaminar tensile damage evolution response of open-hole CFRP laminates while considering drilling quality. A model is developed, incorporating drilling delamination and tearing defects using the LaRC05 failure criterion and extended finite element method (XFEM). The model implemented in Abaqus/Standard software and the UDMGINI user subroutine is validated through experimentation. Subsequently, three types of open-hole CFRP laminates with typical drilling defect factors are subjected to tensile failure analysis. The results show a notable decline in the mechanical performance of CFRP laminates when drilling defect factors exceed certain levels. Moreover, a progressive damage evolution pattern is analyzed for open-hole CFRP laminates with respect to ply stacking sequences. The interaction between interlaminar delamination propagation and intralaminar crack evolution paths is discussed, highlighting that the concentration of in-plane shear stress primarily influences the location of crack initiation in CFRP laminates.

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