Nowadays, there is increasing interest in lightweight automotive structures capable of absorbing large quantities of energy in
case of a crash phenomenon. These requirements are satisfied by composite devices, provided they are properly designed. The
aim of the present paper is the investigation of the crashworthy behaviour of composite material tubes with woven laminae
subjected to dynamic axial compression. The research was done by combining experimental and numerical analysis; without
any experimental feedback, in fact, engineers might not accurately design an innovative structure. After the numerical
characterisation of the used CFRP (carbon fibre-reinforced polymer) material, different simulations with the non-linear
explicit dynamic code LS-DYNA have been done in order to understand how the structure absorbs energy by varying its
geometrical and material parameters. In particular, circular and square tubes have been investigated with different resistant
section, wall thickness, fibres orientation and staking sequence. The numerical analysis has been carried out taking into
account different composite material models present in the LS-DYNA library, where each of them implements a different
damage criterion. The choice of model to be used was made only after performing crash tests on the same tubes using a drop
tower, appropriately instrumented in order to measure the main impact characteristics. The comparison between numerical
and experimental results gave satisfactory outcomes, providing the basis for the design methodology of impact attenuators
that are geometrically more complex
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