Abstract

From a modelling standpoint, the morphology of additively manufactured (AM) high-performance short fiber reinforced polymer (SFRP) is essential to characterize, yet this task poses great challenges. The method presented extracts individual fibers from tomographic scans and produces a segmentation that is 93.1% precise on average on a per-fiber basis across a large range of fiber filling ratios (5–40 wt.%), needs minimal human input and is scalable to full-sized datasets containing ∼105 individual fibers. In addition, this tool allows the analysis of the correlated length and orientation distribution of fibers, and the quantification of shear-induced alignment and fiber breakage. The method is validated by successfully reproducing the segmentation of (continuous) fiber reinforced composites published in 2 separate studies and by predicting the fiber volume fraction and material density directly from the tomographic data of SFRPs. The output can serve as a basis for constituent-level mechanical modelling, and to gain insight into the relationship between processing parameters, morphology and mechanical behavior of SFRP. The full source code and imaging data are attached to this publication.

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