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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: The effect of laminate thickness on the fracture behavior of laminated graphite epoxy (T300/5208) composites was studied. The predominantly experimental research program included the study of the 0/+ or - 45/90 sub ns and 0/90 sub ns laminates with thickness of 8, 32, 64, 96 and 120 plies and the 0/+ or - 45 sub ns laminate with thickness of 6, 30, 60, 90 and 120 plies. The research concentrated on the measurement of fracture toughness utilizing the center-cracked tension, compact tension and three point bend specimen configurations. The development of subcritical damage at the crack tip was studied nondestructively using enhanced X-ray radiography and destructively using the laminate deply technique. The test results showed fracture toughness to be a function of laminate thickness. The fracture toughness of the 0 + or - 45/90 sub ns and 0/90 sub ns laminates decreased with increasing thickness and asymptotically approached lower bound values of 30 ksi square root of in. (1043 MPa square root of mm and 25 ksi square root of in (869 MPa square root of mm respectively. In contrast to the other two laminates, the fracture toughness of the 0/+ or - 45 sub ns laminate increased sharply with increasing thickness but reached an upper plateau value of 40 ksi square root of in (1390 MPa square root of mm) at 30 plies. Fracture toughness was independent of crack size for both thin and thick laminates for all three laminate types except for the 0/90 sub 2s laminate which spilt extensively. The center cracked tension, three point bend and compact tension specimens gave comparable results.
    Keywords: COMPOSITE MATERIALS
    Type: NASA-CR-3784 , NAS 1.26:3784
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Critical fracture toughness was determined by two different techniques for graphite/epoxy laminates of three stacking sequences and several thicknesses. Critical fracture toughness was determined by a finite element stress analysis of a center-cracked tension specimen which yielded the stress intensity factor as a function of specimen thickness and applied load. As an alternative approach the critical strain energy release rate was determined from the compliance calibration technique. Test results from both procedures are compared and discussed.
    Keywords: COMPOSITE MATERIALS
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: The influence of specimen thickness on the fracture toughness of two laminates and three specimen geometries was investigated. As thickness increased the toughness decreased and approached an asymptotic value that was dependent upon the type of laminate but was practically independent of specimen geometry. Enhanced X-ray photographs and removal of an outside ply revealed that most of the delaminations were surface effects.
    Keywords: COMPOSITE MATERIALS
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: The relationship between both fracture toughness and the development of crack-tip damage as a function of specimen thickness was investigated. Fracture toughness was determined experimentally using center-cracked tension specimens for (0/plus or minus 45/90)ns and (0/90)ns laminates, where ns means multiple layers with the same repeated sequence and symmetric about the midplane. Laminate thicknesses ranged from 8 plies to 96 plies. As with isotropic metals, fracture toughness was found to decrease with increasing specimen thickness and asymptotically approached a lower bound. The crack tip damage in the (0/plus or minus 45/90)ns laminate does not appear to be a function of thickness. However, there are differences in the damage of the (0/90)2s and (0/90)8s laminates and associated differences in fracture toughness.
    Keywords: COMPOSITE MATERIALS
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