Numerical Study of the Damage Behavior of Carbon Fiber/Glass Fiber Hybrid Composite Laminates under Low-velocity Impact

Journal Article (2020)
Author(s)

Chenxu Zhang (Shaanxi Key Laboratory of Impact Dynamics and Its Engineering Application, Northwestern Polytechnical University)

Jia Huang (University of Shanghai for Science and Technology)

X. Li (TU Delft - Structural Integrity & Composites)

Chao Zhang (Northwestern Polytechnical University, Shaanxi Key Laboratory of Impact Dynamics and Its Engineering Application)

Research Group
Structural Integrity & Composites
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12221-020-0026-2
More Info
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Publication Year
2020
Language
English
Research Group
Structural Integrity & Composites
Issue number
12
Volume number
21
Pages (from-to)
2873-2887

Abstract

Carbon fiber-reinforced composite materials are widely employed in aircraft structures due to their high specific strength and high specific modulus. However, the poor impact resistance of carbon fiber reinforced composites creates challenges for aircraft design and maintenance. The introduction of a layer of glass fibers in the hybrid composites can effectively improve the impact performance of the composite laminate. In this work, finite element models for low-velocity impact of carbon fiber laminate and glass fiber laminate are established and validated. A VUMAT subroutine in Abaqus is implemented to evaluate the progressive damage of the composite materials, and a cohesive-zone model is employed to simulate the interface failure behavior. The impact resistance of hybrid composite laminates is systematically studied based on the results of the finite element simulation. Ten different hybrid configurations are studied and compared with a composite laminate having a single type of fiber reinforcement. The numerical results for the global mechanical response, damage modes and characteristics are extracted and systematically discussed. The results suggest that laminates having carbon fiber layers on the top and bottom surfaces with glass fiber layers between them perform the best in terms of energy absorption. When the glass fiber layers are used for the top and bottom surfaces with carbon fiber layers as the core, the presence of a carbon fiber layer with a ±45 ° orientation can help to reduce the damage area.

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