What are the tasks of the Fibers and the matrix?
Wofür stehen die Abkürzungen GF-PA und CF-EP?
- Glass fiber polyamid composite: GF-PA
- Carbon fiber epoxy composite: CF-EP
What are the basic assumptions for unidirectionally reinforces layers?
Fibers are parallel to each other
Even fiber distribution
Ideally straight and unbroken fibers
Ideal adhesion between fibers and matrix
What are typical design variables for a composite engineer?
Number of layers
Fiber volume fraction
Fiber orientations of the individual layers
Layer thicknessess
Stacking sequence
Fiber and matrix materials
What are typical fields of applications for Composite Materials?
Aircraft/ Helicopter —> aviation industry
Posthetics
Sport Equipment (Bike, sailing)
Bridges (low maintenance, high fatigue)
What is a Sandwich Material
e.g. GLARE
What are natural examples for composite materials?
Bones
Muscles
Wood (Bamboo)
Early examples of composite engineering?
Wood engineering
What is an Orthotropic plate?
Mirror symmetry w.r.t. the x1-x2-plane, the x1-x3-plane and the x2-x3-plane
—> Basic assumption for lecture
What is transversal isotropy
Isotropy w.r.t. the x2-x3-plane
Why can we apply Orthotropy to laminate layers?
The material shows 3 planes of symmetry, lying in the 3 principal axis.
—> In the layer itself, shear cuppling and bending twisting coupling are avoided
Which behaviour yields from the regular distribution of fibres in the cross section.
A transversal istrotpy in the x2 - x3 plane
In Orthotropy, which of the shear moduli will be the lowest?
From G12, G13 & G23, G23 will be the lowest because only the Matrix is load carrying
Why is nu12 expected to be higher than nu21 for an orthotropic laminate layer?
Because a strain in 1 will yield a higher strain in 2 than vice versa
How to compliance and stiffness Matrix differentiate?
In the context of rules of mixture, why don´t we utilize vf (fibre volume fraction) to the fullest and what is a typical value?
Typical value: 60%
If utilized further, fibre-fibre contact starts existing, which cannot bare any load. Further, a vf of 0,6 isn´t far of from the max. possible:
What are the basic assumptions of CLPT?
Kirchhoff Plate Kinematics - Crosssections remain plane and normal to middle plane (analog to Euler-Bernoulli beam)
Plane state of stress
Plane state of strain -> Thickness doesn´t change
What are limits of CLPT?
Thin layered structures (b/h >10)
Not applicable if the transverse shear stiffness is low
Errors are non conservative
How can bending extension coupling be avoided?
With symmetric laminates
Which ABD Components are responsible for shear coupling?
A16 & A26
Which ABD Components are responsible for bending-extension coupling?
B11
Which ABD components are responsible for bending-twisting coupling?
D16 & D26
How can Bending-Twisting coupling be avoided?
By utilizing orthotropic layers —> Cross-ply laminate (only 0 and 90°)
How can shear coupling be avoided?
By using balanced laminates —> for every layer angle not equal to 0 or 90, there is a layer with an opposite angle (always +/- pairs)
What is the rule of mixture for E11?
The basic modell is springs in parallel —> Same stress:
How can Matrix failure be detected?
Crackling noises
Getting milky
Stiffness reduction
What is described by a rule of mixture?
It describes how to develop effective material properties for a given mixture from the basic material properties and the volume fractions.
What is the rule of mixture for E22
The basic model is springs in series
What is the rule of mixture for the shear modulus?
The basic model is springs in series:
What is more influenced by moisture, fibre or matrix?
Usually the matrix is more influenced by mositure. (However Aramid and natural fibres will take up moisture)
How are the material porperties influenced by Temperature and Humidity?
Mass and dimensional increase due to moisture absorbtion
Lower electrical and thermal resistance
Lower Modulus of elasticity
Resulting Eigenstresses
Lower barable load
—> Especially the combination of high humidity and temperature is detremental
How does damage propagate over different scales?
The start at Micro damages, e.g. a single fibre fracture or Matrix micro crack (1mü)
They develop to Micro cracks (10mü), e.g. fracture of fibre groups, micro delaminations, buckling of fibres, growth of micro cracks
Macro cracks are complete layer damage, e.g. Fiber layer fracture. buckling of layers or delaminations (100mü - 1mm)
Strucutral failure describes the unstable growth of cracks, the structure cannot bear the load annymore.
Which are the assumptions made in the lecture regarding strength analysis?
Individual layers are considered
Inplane state of stress
Which strength values are required for strength analysis?
Xt - Axial tensile strength
Xc - Axial compressive strength
Yt - Transverse tensile strength
Yc - Transverse compressive strength
S - shear strength
—> They are usually derrived via experiment
Give the failure mode for Xt
Fibre Fracture
Give the failure mode for Xc
Fibre buckling
Give the failure mode for Yt
Matrix failure
Give the failure mode for Yc
Give the failure mode of S
What is generally higher, Xc or Xt?
Xt
What are different failure criteria and how are they evaluated?
Maximum stress criterion —> Don´t use, doesn´t consider stress interactions (remember mehrdimensionaler Spannungszustand, Vergleichsspannung)
Maximum strain criterion —> Don´t use, same issue as max. stress
Tsai-Hill —> Considers interaction, but doesn´t distinguish between failure modes and compressive, tensile failure
Tsai-Wu —> Considers interaction and compressive, tensile failure, doesn´t consider different failure modes
Puck´s criterion —> Gives different criteria for different failure modes —> Full consideration
Hashin´s criterion —> Gives different criteria for different failure modes —> Full consideration
Failure that differentiate failure mode will evaluate for fibre and matrix failure. They have an evaluation for compressive and tensile load for both sigma-11 and -22
What are basic design rules for laminates?
Always used balanced laminates —> No shear coupling and no Eigenstresses
Min 10% of layers in a certain orientation, max. 70%
Always use symmetric laminates —> No bending-extension coupling
balance distribution of layers (don´t accumulate a single orientation) and ensure that adjacent layer angle differences aren´t too large
Assemble +/-45° layers (violates last rule)
Do not assemble layers of equal orientation (bad fatigue and crack resistence)
Outer layers: For Bolts and shear loads - 45°; for buckling - 0°
Which kind of stresses occur in loop connections and where are they the highest?
What is an easy measure to increase load carrying ability in a loop connector?
Lateral support
How can loop connectors be optimized in design, and what is the general underlying issue?
General issue: Loads of manual work
Series connection
Multilayered
Hybrid loop (GFRP more compliant, stiff CFRP “attracts stresses”)
What are advantages of adhesive joints?
Different materials can be joined
No heat influence
No notch effect as with bolt
Sealing effect
Rough tolerances possible
High damping - energy absorption
What are disadvantages of adhesive joints?
Non - uniform stresses and stress peaks in adhesive
Sensitive to peeling
Adhesives are limited in regard to temperature and humidity
Production and QA nor fully reliable
Material overlaps needed
What are typical adhesive joint designs and how to they differentiate
Shafting
Dobule lap
Single lap (bending)
Doubler (used for repair)
What is a workable shafting angle?
>85°
How should overlapping adhesive joints be designed?
There is a minimum overlap length which will minimize stress peaks, beyond that, no further improvement to be expected
How can adhesive joints be optimized?
Graded adhesive layer
Optimice edges
Secure against peeling #Angschtniet
What are advantages of Screws/ rivets?
Screws (screw rivets) are detachable
Low scatter of properties for screws and rivets
Bolts and joints allow for good QA
High energy absorption
What are disadvantages of Screws/ rivets?
Holes reduce strength in laminate
Screw and rivet heads may be disadvantageous
What are the two basic designs for screw/ rivet joints?
Single & Double lap joint
What is the basic issue for single lap joints with rivets and screws
Bending is introduced
Failure mode screw/ rivet, what is safe, what not?
Bearing failure (safe, desired, energy absorption)
Tensile failure (unsafe)
Shear failure (unsafe)
Splitting failure (unsafe)
How are wholes manufactured for rivets/ screws?
Idealy they are pierced and not drilled
What are the two fundamental cases when designing bolt rows?
Rigid bolts, compliant part —> Forces only transferred by end bolts
Compliant bolts, rigid part —> Forces equally transferred by all bolts
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