Experimental and numerical study of process-induced defects and their effect on fatigue debonding in composite joints

Date

2019-03-22

Supervisor/s

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Department

Type

Article

ISSN

0142-1123

Format

Free to read from

Citation

Liu Y, Zhang X, Lemanski S, et al., (2019) Experimental and numerical study of process-induced defects and their effect on fatigue debonding in composite joints. International Journal of Fatigue, Volume 125, August 2019, pp. 47-57

Abstract

Laboratory coupon joints for fatigue debonding tests usually have narrow width and a through-width initial disbond. However, realistic structural joints are much wider and may contain process-induced defects and accidental damage; both are much smaller than the joint width. Small and discrete damage may behave differently from the idealised through-width disbond crack. This has brought a question on whether the laboratory coupon joint can accurately represent the fatigue behaviour of wider structural joints. This paper presents an experimental and numerical study of fatigue behaviour of a wide bonded lap joint with a process-induced defect of semi-circular shape. Fatigue debonding propagation was monitored by ultrasound inspection. Fatigue life was predicted using a normalised strain energy release rate parameter calculated by finite element method, and the adhesive material fatigue crack growth rate data measured under single and mixed mode conditions. Simulation of process-induced defect and validation by experiments have brought a better understanding of fatigue debonding behaviour in wide joints containing realistic damage. Suggestions are given for fatigue fracture tests of bonded joints.

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

Adhesive bonding, Disbond, Composites, Finite element analysis, Fatigue life prediction

DOI

Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

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