Περίληψη
The motivation for the present research was the integrity estimation of shell – like structures made of damage tolerant composite materials, using acoustic non destructive testing techniques. An experimental and theoretical study was held aiming to investigate the influence of the damage, accumulated in a loaded laminate, in measurable wave propagation characteristics. The thesis is separated in two major parts. One described with detail the damage simulation model and the other the damage effects on the wave propagation and the wave mechanics. The study was focused on damage modes developed in composite laminates under in – plane complex stress fields due to several loading conditions and various mechanical models were developed for simulation purposes. Emphasis was given in the description of the material performance under monotonic static loading. Thus, a phenomenological progressive damage model for gl/ep multiaxial laminates was developed. This was structured based on four pillars ...
The motivation for the present research was the integrity estimation of shell – like structures made of damage tolerant composite materials, using acoustic non destructive testing techniques. An experimental and theoretical study was held aiming to investigate the influence of the damage, accumulated in a loaded laminate, in measurable wave propagation characteristics. The thesis is separated in two major parts. One described with detail the damage simulation model and the other the damage effects on the wave propagation and the wave mechanics. The study was focused on damage modes developed in composite laminates under in – plane complex stress fields due to several loading conditions and various mechanical models were developed for simulation purposes. Emphasis was given in the description of the material performance under monotonic static loading. Thus, a phenomenological progressive damage model for gl/ep multiaxial laminates was developed. This was structured based on four pillars. Primarily, as the laminate basic building block, the unidirectional layer was mechanically characterized. Such an extended experimental procedure can hardly be found. Secondly, the test results defined the ply constitutive equation laws. The highly anisotropic material non – linearity was approximated with piece – wise linear incremental layer by layer stress analysis using tangential elasticity. The third pillar regarded the damage initiation conditions. Thus, well defined criteria widely accepted in composite design were implemented i.e. Puck, Shokrieh and Lessard, etc. Finally post failure strategies were deployed, simulating material mechanical properties degradation emerging during damage accumulation. The progressive damage model was incorporated in a shell element of a commercial finite element code. An extended validation procedure took place comparing numerical results with several uniaxial and innovative biaxial test data. During this procedure the G12 shear modulus dependence on the developed plane stress field was thoroughly studied, resulting in recommendations for the designer and the selection of the appropriate modulus value. Additionally, the material model was further enhanced, taking into account incompatible failures with its constitutive equations e.g. delamination. Having developed several tools that described damage existence or accumulation, this dissertation was finished with the structural integrity study, using the acousto – ultrasonics non destructive testing technique. The experimental and theoretical background for stress wave propagation in waveguides was presented. Numerically damaged material models were additionally inspected with numerical non – destructive tests, resulting in specific conclusions for damage effect on measurable wave propagation characteristics, e.g. phase velocity reduction with damage growth.
περισσότερα
Περίληψη σε άλλη γλώσσα
The motivation for the present research was the integrity estimation of shell – like structures made of damage tolerant composite materials, using acoustic non destructive testing techniques. An experimental and theoretical study was held aiming to investigate the influence of the damage, accumulated in a loaded laminate, in measurable wave propagation characteristics. The thesis is separated in two major parts. One described with detail the damage simulation model and the other the damage effects on the wave propagation and the wave mechanics. The study was focused on damage modes developed in composite laminates under in – plane complex stress fields due to several loading conditions and various mechanical models were developed for simulation purposes. Emphasis was given in the description of the material performance under monotonic static loading. Thus, a phenomenological progressive damage model for gl/ep multiaxial laminates was developed. This was structured based on four pillars ...
The motivation for the present research was the integrity estimation of shell – like structures made of damage tolerant composite materials, using acoustic non destructive testing techniques. An experimental and theoretical study was held aiming to investigate the influence of the damage, accumulated in a loaded laminate, in measurable wave propagation characteristics. The thesis is separated in two major parts. One described with detail the damage simulation model and the other the damage effects on the wave propagation and the wave mechanics. The study was focused on damage modes developed in composite laminates under in – plane complex stress fields due to several loading conditions and various mechanical models were developed for simulation purposes. Emphasis was given in the description of the material performance under monotonic static loading. Thus, a phenomenological progressive damage model for gl/ep multiaxial laminates was developed. This was structured based on four pillars. Primarily, as the laminate basic building block, the unidirectional layer was mechanically characterized. Such an extended experimental procedure can hardly be found. Secondly, the test results defined the ply constitutive equation laws. The highly anisotropic material non – linearity was approximated with piece – wise linear incremental layer by layer stress analysis using tangential elasticity. The third pillar regarded the damage initiation conditions. Thus, well defined criteria widely accepted in composite design were implemented i.e. Puck, Shokrieh and Lessard, etc. Finally post failure strategies were deployed, simulating material mechanical properties degradation emerging during damage accumulation. The progressive damage model was incorporated in a shell element of a commercial finite element code. An extended validation procedure took place comparing numerical results with several uniaxial and innovative biaxial test data. During this procedure the G12 shear modulus dependence on the developed plane stress field was thoroughly studied, resulting in recommendations for the designer and the selection of the appropriate modulus value. Additionally, the material model was further enhanced, taking into account incompatible failures with its constitutive equations e.g. delamination. Having developed several tools that described damage existence or accumulation, this dissertation was finished with the structural integrity study, using the acousto – ultrasonics non destructive testing technique. The experimental and theoretical background for stress wave propagation in waveguides was presented. Numerically damaged material models were additionally inspected with numerical non – destructive tests, resulting in specific conclusions for damage effect on measurable wave propagation characteristics, e.g. phase velocity reduction with damage growth.
περισσότερα