dc.description.abstract |
Fibre reinforced polymer composite panels are preferred in high performance structural panels
because they are strong, stiff and light. Stress raisers such as holes or notches (for accessibility,
mechanical joining, and routing of cables etc.) may be present in any engineering structure and
composite structures are no exception. Theoretically, a stress raiser is simply a localization of high
stress-strain concentrations quantified by the Stress Concentration Factor (SCF). It is well
established in literature and engineering practice that stress-strain concentrations due to holes or
notches, unless accompanied by local plastic strain hardening, reduce the apparent strength of the
panels. Since SCF is a function of elastic properties of the material, so in isotropic materials, the
SCF is defined with elastic SCF (entails elastic properties within the elastic range of material) and
plastic SCF (entails elastic properties in the plastic range of material). However, literature is scarce
of such definition for the case of anisotropic/orthotropic materials, where the SCF is also a function
of its elastic properties. Contrary to isotropic homogenous materials, composite panels offer a very
complex structure, where fibres are generally regarded as brittle which deform elastically to final
failure exhibiting either slight or no linear deformation. Whereas matrices generally experience
plastic deformation hence the failure strain in matrics is far higher than the fibres. Additionally,
once a composite panel containing a hole is subjected to tensile loading, tangential stress at the
periphery of the hole in a perpendicular direction to the load axis attains a magnitude three times
the far field stress under plane stress conditions. However, in a composite panel, the location and
magnitude of the maximum stress are at the periphery of the hole changes with the fibre orientation
and stacking sequence, therefore designers opt for large safety margins.
This study has been performed to investigate the pre-damaged SCF and progressive-damaged SCF
for anisotropic/orthotropic material analogous to elastic and plastic deformations in isotropic
material respectively. The study presents a novel technique of calculating progressive-damaged
SCF which evaluates the changing SCF in response to the progressive damage development within
the composite panel. Finite Element (FE) representations simulate delamination damage using
cohesive elements and in-plane damage using continuum damage mechanics. In the first part of
the study, test coupons have been formulated under static conditions to consider important
influencing factors on the SCF for the case of the composite panel containing a central circular
hole subjected to tensile loading and compared with the already published literature. Later, several
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FE coupons have been formulated to precisely investigate the pre-damaged SCF and progressivedamaged
SCF for the composite panel. During the study, the investigations of pre-damaged SCF
and progressive-damaged SCF have also been performed using analytical and experimental
approaches where applicable. The FE results are found in good agreement with the analytical and
experimental results. The study provides a novel systematic FE approach for the estimation of
progressive-damaged SCF for a composite panel, which has not been reported in the literature
before. Certainly, the study proposes a paradigm shift in design philosophy which at present is
limited to no-damage philosophy especially in aerospace, where the weight savings due to less
generous safety factors are significant. |
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