Abstract

The effects of geometric scaling on the strain rate sensitivity of unidirectional and [+45/−45]s laminates under uniaxial tensile loading has been investigated experimentally. Two material systems, Toray T800/3900-2B carbon/epoxy unitape and Newport NB321/7781 fiberglass/epoxy fabric, were used in the study. The nominal strain rates investigated ranged from quasi-static (0.0002 s−1) to moderate strain rates of 50 s−1 across the scaled specimen geometries. The geometric scaling effects at different strain rates were quantified in terms of the Weibull modulus. At each strain rate, the average failure stress of [0]4 carbon, [0]4 fiberglass, and [±45]s fiberglass showed a declining trend with increasing specimen size. However, the percentage of the strength reduction was less significant at higher strain rates compared to the quasi-static strain rate. In contrast to the other stacking sequences, [+45/−45]s carbon specimens showed a maximum percentage in strength reduction at a high strain rate compared to the quasi-static strain rate, indicating increased scaling effect with strain rate. The magnitude of Weibull modulus ( m) for the specimens increased with strain rate indicating diminishing scaling effects, while [+45/−45]s carbon specimens exhibited an opposite trend.

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