Abstract

This study investigates the failure mechanisms of cross-ply laminates subjected to longitudinal compressive loading. A sequence of failure initiation and propagation process is observed based on optical microscopy images of failed specimens. Specifically, the failure process in the cross-ply laminates involves a combination of four failure mechanisms: fiber kinking, delamination, matrix cracking, and fiber/matrix splitting. We find that the kink-bands in the middle 0° plies of the cross-ply laminates most often show a wedge shape and the angle of matrix cracks in the 90° plies is slightly larger than that of pure 90° plies. The reason has been attributed to the constraining effects by the adjacent plies. The next focus of this study is to propose hybrid micro-macro models to more systematically study the failure mechanisms of the cross-ply laminates. We show that these models accurately predict the combined failure modes of the cross-ply laminates and enable us to closely investigate the interactions of different failure mechanisms. More importantly, the hybrid models achieve great computational efficiency compared to full-scale microstructural models. The combined experimental and computational analyses presented here provide a new level of understanding of the kink-band morphology and damage mechanisms in the cross-ply laminates.

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