4.7 Article

Tensile behavior of C/SiC composites plate after hypervelocity penetration: Residual strength and fracture mechanism

Journal

COMPOSITE STRUCTURES
Volume 189, Issue -, Pages 378-385

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.compstruct.2018.01.058

Keywords

C/SiC composites; Hypervelocity penetration; Residual strength; Fracture mechanism

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [11372256, 11527803, 11102168, 11272267]

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The damage and tensile mechanical behavior of C/SiC composites plate after hypervelocity penetration are studied in this paper. Hypervelocity penetration is applied along the out-of-plane direction by an electrical gun at 3.5 km s(-1), and the target is recovered for damage observation and tension test. Quasi-static tensions on the recovered targets and the slices cut from damage zone are examined along with high-speed photography. Moreover, corresponding numerical simulations are carried out. The damage zone in the vicinity of the penetration hole is small (similar to 10 mm), and the damage mode involves SiC matrix fracture, delamination, fiber bundle splitting and fiber breaking. The simulation results suggest that the degree of damage decreases exponentially with the increasing distance from the penetration hole center of the target plate. As the degree of damage increases, the tensile strength of C/SiC composites decreases and the corresponding fracture mode changes from shear failure to tensile breakage. Additionally the fracture surface becomes smoother, the quantity and length of fiber pullout also increases. Since the decrease of elastic modulus induced by damage weakens the stress concentration effect of the penetration hole, the residual strength of recovered target plate is only reduced from 241 MPa to 175 MPa.

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