2 research outputs found

    Flat tensile specimen design for advanced composites

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    Finite element analyses of flat, reduced gage section tensile specimens with various transition region contours were performed. Within dimensional constraints, such as maximum length, tab region width, gage width, gage length, and minimum tab length, a transition contour radius of 41.9 cm produced the lowest stress values in the specimen transition region. The stresses in the transition region were not sensitive to specimen material properties. The stresses in the tab region were sensitive to specimen composite and/or tab material properties. An evaluation of stresses with different specimen composite and tab material combinations must account for material nonlinearity of both the tab and the specimen composite. Material nonlinearity can either relieve stresses in the composite under the tab or elevate them to cause failure under the tab

    Thermomechanical Fatigue Behavior of Three Cfcc's

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    The thermomechanical fatigue (TMF) behavior of three continuous-fiber ceramic composites (CFCC's) was examined. The three matrices consisted of two different glass-ceramics and silicon carbide, respectively. The matrices of some of the specimens with the silicon carbide matrix were enhanced to improve oxidation resistance. All three were reinforced with Nicalon fibers with various fiber architectures. The thermoelastic properties of the matrix relative to the fibers, the elastic moduli and coefficients of thermal expansion (CTE), were different in each composite, providing a comparison of the effects of these critical properties. The specimens were tested under in-phase (IP) and out-of-phase (OP) cyclic loadings with respect to thermal cycling between 600 C and 1100 C. One of the glass-ceramic composites had greatly increased TMF lives compared to the other glass-ceramic matrix composites. This was probably caused by the reversal of the CTE mismatch between the fibers and the matrices and caused by the different oxidation resistances of the composites. For the same TMF lives a cross-ply reinforced composite had a maximum cyclic stress half as great, as that of unidirectionally reinforced composite. This indicated that the (0 deg) ply fibers had a strong influence of TMF life. Both the glass ceramic matrix composites had shallow-slope stress-life plots that indicated sensitivity to damage and therefore low damage tolerance. The composites with an unenhanced silicon carbide matrix experienced the shortest TMF lives of all the CFCC's tested. However, the enhanced composite had the longest. Also, the enhanced composite demonstrated the best damage tolerance as evidenced by a stress-life curve that curves sharply upward to the left. In all the composites, out-of-phase cyclic loading was worse than in-phase cyclic loadings despite the CTE mismatch between fiber and matrix. A damage investigation and a preliminary analysis of the stresses in the fibers and matrices taking into account their respective thermoelastic properties provided insight into the relative behavior of the glass-ceramic matrix composites under IP and OP TMF
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