Abstract

Unidirectional long fiber reinforced polymers generally exhibit unfavorable abrupt and brittle failure under mechanical stresses without pre-warning which currently limits their use in safety critical applications. The lack of ductility of such composites can be overcome by interlayer hybridization where Low Strain (LS) material is sandwiched between High Strain (HS) material. This results in complex failure mechanisms, including multiple interacting damage modes, such as ply fragmentation and delamination. All-carbon unidirectional hybrid laminates with different layup sequences were designed and manufactured to study the pseudo-ductile behavior. An available analytical model was exploited to predict the damage scenarios of the laminates, both with stress-strain diagrams and damage mode maps. Tensile tests were carried out using different measurement and observation techniques including digital image correlation (DIC), embedded distributed fiber optic sensors (dFOS) and helicoidal X-ray computed tomography (CT). A finite element model was also developed to predict the damage mechanisms. Validated by experimental results, the numerical model was found to accurately predict the tensile damage modes and their evolution in the considered unidirectional thick ply all-carbon hybrid laminates.

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