Abstract

The scales of coelacanth fish feature a rare double-helicoidal structure of collagenous fibrils, exhibiting great toughness. In this study, inspired by such biomaterials, engineering composite materials are designed and fabricated. Quasi-static three-point bending and Charpy impact tests are performed to evaluate their mechanical performance compared with the single-helicoidal counterparts (emulated from the Bouligand structure in Odontodactylus scyllarus). Multiple delaminations are observed in the double-helicoidal composites, which preclude tensile crack propagation and then prolong the failure displacement; meanwhile, for single-helicoidal composites, the fiber architecture at the mid-plane serves as a vital role for hindering translaminar cracks propagation across the mid-plane. The dynamic energy absorption of double-helicoidal composites can reach 163.44 kJ m−2, 26.5% greater than that of the corresponding single-helicoidal samples, which is attributed to the more complex failure modes including fiber breakage and matrix cracking that both contribute to energy absorption. Double-helicoidal composites are not sensitive to fiber orientations on failure mode and such attribute enables more design freedoms. Additionally, the interlaminar stress is analyzed, and a greater value of the interlaminar stresses σ13 is discovered to be responsible for the delamination of double-helicoidal composites. Results reveal the underlying toughening mechanism of coelacanth-fish-inspired double-helicoidal composites and promote the next-generation impact-resistant composites design.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call