Experimental and numerical investigation of the strain rate-dependent compression behaviour of a carbon-epoxy structure

Journal Article (2018)
Author(s)

T. Schmack (Technische Uni­ver­si­tät Dort­mund, Light Weight Center)

T.M. Morgado Martins Filipe (TU Delft - Structural Integrity & Composites)

G. Deinzer (Light Weight Center)

C Kassapoglou (TU Delft - Aerospace Structures & Computational Mechanics)

F. Walther (Technische Uni­ver­si­tät Dort­mund)

Research Group
Aerospace Structures & Computational Mechanics
Copyright
© 2018 T. Schmack, T.M. Morgado Martins Filipe, G. Deinzer, C. Kassapoglou, F. Walther
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.compstruct.2017.11.025
More Info
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Publication Year
2018
Language
English
Copyright
© 2018 T. Schmack, T.M. Morgado Martins Filipe, G. Deinzer, C. Kassapoglou, F. Walther
Research Group
Aerospace Structures & Computational Mechanics
Volume number
189
Pages (from-to)
256-262
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

The usage of fibre-reinforced composites in automotive body structures is still a rarity. The main goal in body structure development is to design lightweight structures as cost-efficient as possible. This research contributes to the approach of maximal material usage by considering the strength increase of a carbon-epoxy laminate with increasing strain rate. The objective was to substantiate the well-known material characteristic's strain rate dependency from a coupon level to realistic body structure component – experimentally and numerically. Hence, a special compression fixture was developed to obtain all necessary characteristic values of the investigated T700S DT120 prepreg system. The rectangular coupon specimens were loaded with quasi-static to intermediate strain rates (2×10-4 to 70s-1). A second compression fixture was developed to axial load omega cross-sectional specimens with strain rates from 2×10-4 to 5s-1. The experimental tests showed a significant increase of +23% and +21% in compression strength for rectangular coupon specimens and omega cross-sectional components, respectively. Furthermore, the numerical simulation showed the same increase in strength of +21% for omega cross-sectional components. This work has proven the necessity of considering the strain rate dependency of a composite material to accurately predict the maximum load capacity of a structure during a dynamic load event like a crash.

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