4.7 Article

Characterization and modeling of the ratcheting behavior of unidirectional off-axis composites

Journal

COMPOSITE STRUCTURES
Volume 273, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.compstruct.2021.114305

Keywords

Fiber-reinforced polymer; Cyclic plasticity; Hysteresis behavior; Ratcheting effects; Creep

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52078362]
  2. Hitachi Construction Machinery Co. Ltd. (Japan) [1330-239-0009]

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The study investigates the ratcheting behavior of carbon/epoxy composites under different conditions and proposes a theoretical model. Experimental results show that fiber orientation and loading stress have a significant impact on ratcheting behavior.
The ratcheting behavior of unidirectional carbon/epoxy composites under cyclic off-axis loading with non-zero average stress was investigated, with a focus on the influence of peak stress (stress ratio R = 0) and fiber orientation. The experimental results show that nonlinear hysteresis and ratcheting behaviors heavily depend on fiber orientation and loading stress. Herein, the evolutionary features of the nonlinear hysteresis behavior and ratcheting deformation of the material are discussed. Furthermore, a creep damage-coupled viscoplastic cyclic constitutive model based on the nonlinear hysteresis behavior and cyclic creep is proposed to simulate the ratcheting behavior of carbon fiber composites under different stress levels and with various fiber orientations. The proposed model can adequately predict the nonlinear response during loading, hysteresis behavior during unloading and reloading, and ratcheting phenomena after a large number of cycles.

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