Fatigue fracture-behavior of carbon-fiber-reinforced modified bismaleimide composites


Autoria(s): 冼杏娟; Choy CL
Data(s)

1994

Resumo

The fracture toughness and fatigue fracture behaviour of carbon-fiber-reinforced modified bismaleimide (BMI) composites have been studied. These composites were found to have higher fracture toughnes, better damage tolerance and longer fatigue life than carbon-fiber composites with epoxy matrices. Delamination is the major mode of failure in fatigue and it is controlled by the properties of the matrix and interface. The improved performance is dire to the presence of thermoplastic particles in the modified BMI matrix which gives rise to enhanced fiber/matrix adhesion and more extensive plastic deformation. The fatigue behaviour also depends on the stacking sequence, with the multidirectional [45/90/-45/0] fiber-reinforced modified BMI composite having a lower crack propagation rate and longer fatigue life than the unidirectional laminate. This arises because of the constraint on the damage processes due to the different fiber orientation in the plies.

Identificador

http://dspace.imech.ac.cn/handle/311007/39282

http://www.irgrid.ac.cn/handle/1471x/4987

Idioma(s)

英语

Fonte

Composites Science And Technology.1994,52(1):93-98

Palavras-Chave #Fatigue #Fracture Toughness #Modified Bismaleimide #Composites #Microstructure
Tipo

期刊论文