Abstract

Microcracking in composite honeycomb sandwich structure and its effect on mechanical properties are studied in this paper. A methodology is presented to study the extent of mechanical strength degradation of composite sandwich structure, subjected to thermal fatigue. The material under study is used for spacecraft structural applications. The test coupons were exposed to thermal cycling at elevated temperature as high as +150°C inside the oven and cryogenic temperature of −190°C by dipping in liquid nitrogen, which is comparable to the thermal environment experienced by spacecraft structures. After each thermal cycle, coupons were inspected for microcracks under an optical microscope at the cross section. The microcracks were then quantified using parameters like crack length and crack density with increase in the number of cycles. Flatwise tensile test was conducted on the coupons after every 10 thermal cycles, up to 60 cycles, to make a correlation between crack density and mechanical strength. It was observed that by increasing the number of thermal cycles, the crack density increases and the flatwise tensile strength decreases up to a specific number of cycles. Finite element analysis was performed to predict the possible location of microcracks formation and compared with experimental observation. Good correlation was observed.

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