Experimental Investigation of Mode II Fracture and Fatigue in Unidirectional Carbon/Epoxy Composite Beams
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Howe, Ryan
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Abstract
This paper investigates mode II quasi-brittle fracture and fatigue in laminated compositestructures and characterizes the phenomena in the form of size effect and Cohesive Zone
Models (CZMs). This research focuses primarily on mode II quasi-static fracture, but also
includes a preliminary experimental investigation of quasi-static fatigue and numerical investigation
of forced-dynamic fatigue.
For these case studies, composite beam specimens were manufactured in-house using a
closed-molding process to create End-Notched Flexure (ENF) test specimens of different
sizes, using Toray T700G and T800S carbon/epoxy prepregs. An initial pre-crack was induced
using a Teflon insert at the midplane of each specimen, with predetermined crack
lengths. Each case aimed to study crack crowth via fracture or fatigue using geometrically
scaled sizes to study the size effect phenomena. For the quasi-static fracture case, an additional
analysis was applied to identify the influence of Teflon thickness on the fracture energy
using two Teflon films with thicknesses of 76 um and 12.5 um, respectively. Experimental
data was obtained through ENF tests following American Society for Testing and Materials
(ASTM) D7905 parameters, while utilizing microscopic 2D and full-field 3D Digital Image
Correlation (DIC) technology to obtain both local and global behavior of the beams.
The fracture energy for each Teflon case was analyzed using both Linear Elastic Fracture
Mechanics (LEFM) and Bažant’s Type II Size Effect Law (SEL). It was found that using
LEFM resulted in different values for differing scaled geometric specimen sizes, contradicting
fracture energy as a material property. To address this issue, Bažant’s Type II SEL was
applied to the experimental data which produced a single value for fracture energy as a
material property. The impact of Teflon size was also observed under this analysis. It was
found the thick Teflon, 76 um, created a larger resin pocket in the front of the crack tip,
causing a more complex stress profile at the crack tip. Thus, a larger fracture energy was
predicted for the thick insert case by size effect analysis.
From these experimental results, a CZM was formulated based on the 12.5 um thin
Teflon case. This removed the impact of the resin pocket and complex stress distribution
found with the 76 um Teflon insert. The CZM parameters were characterized based on
microscopic DIC data of the crack tip region obtained from the small size fracture testing.
The 3D DIC data was used for validation of global behavior simulated using the CZM, while
the experimental result of the thick Teflon insert case provided an additional data set for
robust validation of the CZM. The results of this investigation suggest a piece-wise CZM
shape to account for the size effect influence.
A preliminary experimental quasi-static fatigue investigation was also conducted using
displacement controlled tests on size affected specimens. The results of these fatigue tests
enabled the formulation of the threshold and stable crack growth regions of the fatigue Paris
Curve for three different specimen sizes. This identified increasing values for threshold Stress
Intensity Factors, Kth, and increasing slopes for the linear fatigue crack growth for increasing
specimen size, further demonstrating the size effect influence. Future work is outlined to
develop all regions of the fatigue Paris Curve using both displacement and load controlled
testing methods.
Description
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2021
