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Recent Advances in Limiting Fatigue Damage Accumulation Induced by Self-Heating in Polymer-Matrix Composites

Journal

POLYMERS
Volume 14, Issue 24, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/polym14245384

Keywords

self-heating effect; polymer-matrix composites (PMCs); viscoelasticity; structural degradation of PMCs; scale-based fatigue damage mechanism; cooling techniques; materials design; thermal conductivity

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The self-heating effect is a catastrophic phenomenon that occurs in polymers and polymer-matrix composites (PMCs) under fatigue loading or vibrations. It results in temperature growth in these structures due to their low thermal conductivities, leading to thermal stress and fatigue failure. Therefore, understanding and minimizing the self-heating effect is crucial for practical applications.
The self-heating effect can be considered as a catastrophic phenomenon that occurs in polymers and polymer-matrix composites (PMCs) subjected to fatigue loading or vibrations. This phenomenon appears in the form of temperature growth in such structures due to their relatively low thermal conductivities. The appearance of thermal stress resulting from temperature growth and the coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) mismatch between fibers and neighboring polymer matrix initiates and/or accelerates structural degradation and consequently provokes sudden fatigue failure in the structures. Therefore, it is of primary significance for a number of practical applications to first characterize the degradation mechanism at the nano-, micro- and macroscales caused by the self-heating phenomenon and then minimize it through the implementation of numerous approaches. One viable solution is to cool the surfaces of considered structures using various cooling scenarios, such as environmental and operational factors, linked with convection, contributing to enhancing heat removal through convection. Furthermore, if materials are appropriately selected regarding their thermomechanical properties involving thermal conductivity, structural degradation may be prevented or at least minimized. This article presents a benchmarking survey of the conducted research studies associated with the fatigue performance of cyclically loaded PMC structures and an analysis of possible solutions to avoid structural degradation caused by the self-heating effect.

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