Abstract

The joint efficiency of mechanical joints in fiber-reinforced composite materials can be increased significantly by embedding metal plies in the composite layup, as in the case of fiber metal laminates. In this work, a novel finite element-based framework is presented for predicting the static progressive failure behavior of fiber metal laminate bolted joints. Motivated from experimental observations, the proposed framework accounts not only for damage in the fiber-reinforced composite plies, but also for different types of damage of the metallic inlays. For this purpose, user-defined continuum-damage constitutive models are formulated and employed in the general-purpose FE software Abaqus/Implicit for the fiber-reinforced polymer plies and the embedded metallic inlays. Accordingly, the interaction between different failure modes and the influence of the bolt’s washer on the damage evolution is considered to increase the predictive quality. To demonstrate the applicability and validity of the developments, predictive simulations are carried out and compared to conducted experimental measurements on different fiber metal laminate grades (GFRP/stainless steel and CFRP/titanium) with a wide range of metal volume content, reaching from 0% (pure composite material) to 50%.

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