4 research outputs found
Acoustic emission approach for identifying fracture mechanisms in composite bonded Joints: A study on varying Substrate's stacking sequence
This study uses the acoustic emission structural health monitoring method to identify fracture mechanisms in composite bonded joints when varying the substrate stacking sequence. Quasi-static mode I loading tests were performed on secondary adhesively bonded multidirectional composite substrates (0, 90, 45, â45, 60 and â60° fibre orientations). An unsupervised artificial neural network combined with the visual fracture evaluation of the specimens and the Morlet continuous wavelet transform was used to cluster and give the acoustic emission signals a physical meaning. Different fracture mechanisms could be identified within the adhesive layer (i.e., cohesive failure) and in the composite substrates, including non-visible damage mechanisms (matrix micro-cracking, fibre/matrix debonding, fibre pull-out and fibre breakage). Using the Morlet continuous wavelet transform, it was possible to recognise that the highest peak frequency does not always represent the most relevant signature of the fracture mechanism. Moreover, multiple peak frequencies can be associated with multiple fracture mechanisms, such as the fibre pull-out that occurs in the combination of matrix cracking and fibre breakage. Furthermore, no differences were observed in mode I loading conditions between the acoustic emission signatures from the cohesive failure in the adhesive layer and the matrix cracking within the composite substrate. The findings of this study present a great opportunity to gain more insight into the fracture behaviour of polymer materials and fibre-reinforced polymer materials and to improve the quality of adhesively bonded joints.Group DransfeldQN/AfdelingsbureauGroup Teixeira De Freita
Uncovering the toughening mechanisms of bonded joints through tailored CFRP layup
Aiming to increase damage tolerance of adhesively bonded joints, this work explores the influence of CFRP layup of the adherends on the crack onset and crack propagation of composite bonded joints under mode I loading. Quasi-static Double Cantilever Beam tests were performed using four different CFRP layups bonded with two adhesives. Parallel to the experimental program, finite element analyses were performed to aid in understanding and identifying the various damage mechanisms in each specimen type. The results show that the CFRP layup and adhesive fracture toughness significantly influence the joint fracture phenomena at crack onset and further crack propagation. An enhancement of the joint's mode I fracture toughness values at crack onset was observed in the specimens where a crack competition between the propagation within the bondline and the composite's layers was triggered. During crack propagation, the fracture toughness of the joint increases at crack deflections between the different plies of the CFRP layup until reaching the 0° ply, where sudden delamination occurs. It has been shown that CFRP layup tailoring is a promising toughening method that, when carefully designed, has the potential to increase the maximum effective fracture toughness up to 100% when compared to pure cohesive failure.Structural Integrity & Composite
Measurement of charged particle multiplicities and densities in pp collisions at sâ=7 TeV in the forward region
Charged particle multiplicities are studied in
protonâproton collisions in the forward region at a centre-ofmass
energy of
â
s = 7 TeV with data collected by the LHCb
detector. The forward spectrometer allows access to a kinematic
range of 2.0 < η < 4.8 in pseudorapidity, momenta
greater than 2 GeV/c and transverse momenta greater than
0.2 GeV/c. The measurements are performed using events
with at least one charged particle in the kinematic acceptance.
The results are presented as functions of pseudorapidity and
transverse momentum and are compared to predictions from
several Monte Carlo event generators