Abstract

Increasingly broader application of composite materials in commercial airplane primary structure has led to a renewed, more in-depth assessment of the effect composite elements in mechanical joints have on the durability of the metal structure to which they are mated. Thermal stresses, clamp-up loss due to composite creep, composite joint properties, and lightning and electrical grounding effects have been found to be some of the parameters most significantly affecting or limiting the fatigue performance of the metallic constituents within these hybrid joints, influencing the way joint design and analysis are approached.

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