Abstract

Sandwich structures are susceptible to repeated impact loads, and each individual impact is not nearly identical to the previous one, especially for repeated impacts under different impactor shapes such as hail impact. Therefore, the repeated impact behavior using different impactor shape in individual impact of polymethacrylimide (PMI) foam sandwich structure is studied and discussed through experiments and finite element (FE) simulations in this paper. The representative mechanical characteristics such as impact responses, damage modes, and energy absorption are investigated until penetration occurs, and the mechanism of impact damage accumulation between impact events with different impactor shapes is revealed. Besides, the compression after impact (CAI) strength is utilized to assess the residual strength of sandwich structure under repeated impacts. It indicates when the contact area between the specimen and impactor is larger, it can result in a higher impact force, a shorter contact duration, and potentially reduce the extent of damage. The matrix damage is the main damage mode, and the proportions of matrix tension and compression are nearly constant, with a ratio of approximately 2:1. In addition, the proportion of the impact energy absorbed by foam core increases as the number of impacts increases. When the impact energy is low, the CAI strength is sensitive to the number of impacts, the shape of impactor, and the sequence of impactors, but the similar phenomenon does not occur at higher impact energy. The present study provided a series of experimental and numerical results, which could be utilized as design reference guidance in the designing of composite sandwich structures.

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