4.7 Article

Micromechanics modeling and validation of thermal-mechanical damage in DER353 epoxy/borosilicate glass composite subject to high strain rate deformation

Journal

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijimpeng.2019.103414

Keywords

Unidirectional composites; Micromechanical modeling; Continuum damage model (CDM); Adiabatic heating; Epoxy resin

Funding

  1. Center for Materials in Extreme Dynamic Environments(CMEDE) of the Army Research Laboratory [W911NF-122-0022]

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With advances in the design and manufacturing of composite materials, the number of their defense and civil applications has grown significantly. This calls for detailed experiments and modeling of composite materials for their characterization and performance analysis. Experiments show that adiabatic heating becomes more noticeable at high-strain-rate deformation, causing the stress-strain slopes to become negative. However, most rate dependent micromechanics models, e.g. in a previous work by the authors [1], lack an interpretation of the relation between energy dissipation and adiabatic temperature rise. In this study, a continuum damage model (CDM) with adiabatic heating is established to enhance the accuracy of the micromechanics model under highstrain-rate impacts. The model predicts the behavior of a heterogeneous material and punch shear strength tests are used for validation. The model is calibrated using results from experiments conducted in a split-Hopkinson pressure bar (SHPB). A constitutive law for the DER353 epoxy in the finite rotation framework is presented first, focusing on the connection between the energy dissipation and local temperature rise. Next, the model is implemented in a finite element framework and calibrated using a SHPB experiment. Lastly, the DER353 epoxy model is applied to a unidirectional fiber composite micromechanics model as a predictive tool. Results show that damage initiates at the material interface and diffuses into individual phases. In addition, the punch shear experiment results are compared with results from the single-fiber RVE model. The comparison shows that the micromechanical model can be used as a multiscale analysis tool. The findings in this work can be used to explore the performance of more complicated microstructures, e.g. woven composites.

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