• Title/Summary/Keyword: Impact Damage

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High-Velocity Impact Damage Detection of Gr/Ep Composite Laminates Using Piezoelectric Thin Film Sensor Signals (압전필름센서 신호를 이용한 Gr/Ep 복합재 적층판의 고속충격 손상탐지)

  • Kim, Jin-Won;Kim, In-Gul
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society For Composite Materials Conference
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    • 2005.04a
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    • pp.13-16
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    • 2005
  • The mechanical properties of composite materials may degrade severely in the presence of damage. Especially, the high-velocity impact such as bird strike, a hailstorm, and a small piece of tire or stone during high taxing, can cause sever damage to the structures and sub-system in spite of a very small mass. However, it is not easy to detect the damage in composite plates using a single technique or any conventional methods. In this paper, the PYDF(polyvinylidene fluoride) film sensors and strain gages were used for monitoring impact damage initiation and propagation in composite laminates. The WT(wavelet transform) and STFT(short time Fourier transform) are used to decompose the sensor signals. A ultrasonic C-scan and a digital microscope are also used to examine the extent of the damage in each case. This research demonstrate how various sensing techniques, PVDF sensor in particular, can be used to characterize high-velocity impact damage in advanced composites.

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A Design Guide for Composite Laminates by the Compressive after Impact Tests (충격후 잔류압축강도시험에 의한 복합재료 적층판의 설계)

  • 정태은;박경하;류정주
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers
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    • v.19 no.9
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    • pp.2105-2113
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    • 1995
  • The compressive tests under impact conditions were performed to establish a design guide for impact damage tolerance. The composition of layup was selected for the real cases of composite aircraft structure. The energy level of visible of visible damage threshold was determined as 7 Joules. It was found that the normalized bending stiffnesses in the direction of closely fixed boundary affected the area of damage. Graphite/epoxy used in the tests exhibited 60% reduction in compression strength at the energy level of visible damage threshold. Wet-conditioned specimens represented 9% reduction in residual compressive strength in comparison with room temperature ambient specimens. In this study, a design factor of 2.1 was proposed for the low velocity impact damage.

Damage Assessment of Curved Composite Laminate Structures Subjected to Low-Velocity Impact (곡률을 가진 적층복합재 구조에서의 저속충격손상 평가)

  • 전정규;권오양
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society For Composite Materials Conference
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    • 2001.05a
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    • pp.69-73
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    • 2001
  • Damage induced by low-velocity impact on the curved composite laminates was experimentally evaluated for CFRP cylindrical shells with the radius of curvatures of 50, 150, 300, and 500 mm. The result was then compared with that of flat laminates. The radius of curvatures and the effective shell stiffness appeared to considerably affect the dynamic impact response of curved shells. Under the same impact energy level, the maximum contact force increased with the decreasing radius of curvatures, with reaching 1.5 times that for plates at the radius of curvature of 50 mm. Since the maximum contact force is directly related to the impact damage, curved laminates can be more susceptible to delamination and less resistant to the low-velocity impact damage. The distribution of delamination along the thickness direction of curved laminates are also different from that of flat plates. Delamination was distributed rather even]y at each interface along the thickness direction of curved laminates. This implies that the effect of curvatures has to be considered for the design of a curved composite laminate.

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Analysis for Impact Damage Resistance in Filament Wound Composite Pressure Vessel (필리멘트 와인딩 복합재 고압압력용기의 충격저항성 해석)

  • Park Jae-Beom;Hwang Tae-Kyung;Kim Hyoung-Guen;Kim Jung-Kyu;Kang Ki-Weon
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers A
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    • v.29 no.8 s.239
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    • pp.1109-1117
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    • 2005
  • To identify damage that develops in filament wound composite pressure vessels subjected to low velocity impact, a series of impact tests was performed on specimens cutting from the full scale pressure vessel. The resulting damages by the three different impactors were assessed by the scanning acoustic and metallurgical microscope. Based on the impact force history and damage, the resistance parameters were proposed and its validity in identifying the damage resistance of CFRP pressure vessel was reviewed. As the results, the impact resistance of the filament wound composites and its dependency on the impactor shape were estimated quantitatively.

Low velocity impact characteristics on environmental variation of composite laminates used in the light rail transit (경량전철 복합 적층판의 환경변화에 대한 저속충격특성)

  • 김후식;김재훈;이영신;박병준;조정미
    • Proceedings of the KSR Conference
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    • 2002.10a
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    • pp.86-91
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    • 2002
  • Glass/phenolic composite laminates have been used in the field of non-flammable light rail transit and their applications have expanded more widely. Low velocity impact tests have been used to evalute the effect of temperature and acceleration aging on low velocity impact response of phenolic matrix composites reinforced with woven E-glass fabric. The damage of matrix cracking and delamination are suddenly reduced the compressive strength after impact. The damage area increases with increasing temperature and impact energy. UT C-scan is used to determine damage areas by impact loading. Therefore, all this observations indicate reduced impact damage resistance and damage tolerance of the laminates at elevated temperature.

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Impact Damage of CFRP Laminated Composites Subjected to Impact Loading (충격하중을 받는 CFRP 적층복합재의 충격손상에 관한 연구)

  • M.S. KiM;Park, S.B.
    • Journal of the Korean Society for Precision Engineering
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    • v.14 no.7
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    • pp.116-125
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    • 1997
  • An investigation was performed to study the impact damage in CFRP laminated composites subjected to impact loading. A finite element model has been developed for predicting the impact damage in laminated composite plates resulting from the ballistic impact. The finite element model was based on the higher-order shear deformation theory and was used to predict the initial intraply matrix cracking and the shape and size of interface delamination in laminated composites. Numerical simulation was performed and then the initiation of the matrix cracking and the shape and size of impacted induced delamination were predicted, and te results were compared with those of impact experiments with the same dimension and stacking sequences. A linear relationship holds between impact velocity and length and width of delamination. As impact velocity is increased, the increase of delamination length is highger than the increase of delamination width.

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Drop-weight impact damage evaluation for carbon fiber/epoxy composite laminates (탄소 섬유강화 복합재료의 중력 낙하 충격으로 인한 손상 평가)

  • Sohn, Min-Seok;Hu, Xiao-Xhi;Ki, Jang-Kyo;Hong, Soon-Hyung
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society For Composite Materials Conference
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    • 2001.05a
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    • pp.89-92
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    • 2001
  • Drop weight impact tests were performed to investigate the impact behavior of carbon fiber/epoxy composite laminates reinforced by short fibers and other interleaving materials. Characterization techniques, such as cross-sectional fractography and scanning acoustic microscopy, were employed quantitatively to assess the internal damage of some composite laminates. Scanning electron microscopy was used to observe impact damage and fracture modes on specimen fracture surfaces. The results show that composite laminates experience various types of fracture; delamination, intra-ply cracking, matrix cracking and fiber breakage depending on the interlayer materials. Among the composite laminates tested in this study, the composites reinforced by Zylon fibers showed very good impact damage resistance with medium level of damage, while the composites interleaved by poly(ethylene-co-acrylic acid) (PEEA) film is expected to deteriorate the bulk strength due to the reduction of fiber volume fraction, even though the damaged area is significantly reduced.

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Damage potential: A dimensionless parameter to characterize soft aircraft impact into robust targets

  • Hlavicka-Laczak, Lili E.;Kollar, Laszlo P.;Karolyi, Gyorgy
    • Structural Engineering and Mechanics
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    • v.78 no.1
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    • pp.31-39
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    • 2021
  • To investigate numerically the effect of all parameters on the outcome of an aircraft impact into robust engineering structures like nuclear power plant containments is a tedious task. In order to reduce the problem to a manageable size, we propose a single dimensionless parameter, the damage potential, to characterize the main features of the impact. The damage potential, which is the ratio of the initial kinetic energy of the aircraft to the work required to crush it, enables us to find the crucial parameter settings that need to be modelled numerically in detail. We show in this paper that the damage potential is indeed the most important parameter of the impact that determines the time-dependent reaction force when either finite element (FE) modelling or the Riera model is applied. We find that parameters that do not alter the damage potential, like elasticity of the target, are of secondary importance and if parameters are altered in a way that the damage potential remains the same then the course of the impact remains similar. We show, however, that the maximum value of the reaction force can be higher in case of elastic targets than in case of rigid targets due to the vibration of the target. The difference between the Riera and FE model results is also found to depend on the damage potential.

Damage of scarf-repaired composite laminates subjected to low-velocity impacts

  • Cheng, Xiaoquan;Zhao, Wenyi;Liu, Shufeng;Xu, Yunyan;Bao, Jianwen
    • Steel and Composite Structures
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    • v.17 no.2
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    • pp.199-213
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    • 2014
  • The damage characters of scarf repaired composite laminates subjected to low-velocity impact with various energy levels at different locations are studied experimentally. The results are compared with those of the original laminates which have no initial damage and don't need repair. The impact load-time history of the specimens, the velocity-time curves of the impactor, the post impact compressive strength of the specimens and the C-scan photographs of the damaged regions are obtained. The delamination threshold load and damage character of the specimen section at impact point are also studied. The results have shown that the impact response of a repaired composite laminate is sensitive to the location of the impact. The impact load and the delamination threshold load have shown different characters for specimens with different impact locations. The debonding characters of the adhesive and compressive strength after impact of the specimens are also influenced by impact locations.

Experimental and Numerical Simulation Studies of Low-Velocity Impact Responses on Sandwich Panels for a BIMODAL Tram

  • Lee, Jae-Youl;Shin, Kwang-Bok;Jeong, Jong-Cheol
    • Advanced Composite Materials
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    • v.18 no.1
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    • pp.1-20
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    • 2009
  • This paper describes the results of experiments and numerical simulation studies on the impact and indentation damage created by low-velocity impact subjected onto honeycomb sandwich panels for application to the BIMODAL tram. The test panels were subjected to low-velocity impact loading using an instrumented testing machine at six energy levels. Contact force histories as a function of time were evaluated and compared. The extent of the damage and depth of the permanent indentation was measured quantitatively using a 3-dimensional scanner. An explicit finite element analysis based on LS-DYNA3D was focused on the introduction of a material damage model and numerical simulation of low-velocity impact responses on honeycomb sandwich panels. Extensive material testing was conducted to determine the input parameters for the metallic and composite face-sheet materials and the effective equivalent damage model for the orthotropic honeycomb core material. Good agreement was obtained between numerical and experimental results; in particular, the numerical simulation was able to predict impact damage area and the depth of indentation of honeycomb sandwich composite panels created by the impact loading.