3 resultados para Failure testing

em Universidad Politécnica de Madrid


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GRC is a cementitious composite material made up of a cement mortar matrix and chopped glass fibers. Due to its outstanding mechanical properties, GRC has been widely used to produce cladding panels and some civil engineering elements. Impact failure of cladding panels made of GRC may occur during production if some tool falls onto the panel, due to stone or other objects impacting at low velocities or caused by debris projected after a blast. Impact failure of a front panel of a building may have not only an important economic value but also human lives may be at risk if broken pieces of the panel fall from the building to the pavement. Therefore, knowing GRC impact strength is necessary to prevent economic costs and putting human lives at risk. One-stage light gas gun is an impact test machine capable of testing different materials subjected to impact loads. An experimental program was carried out, testing GRC samples of five different formulations, commonly used in building industry. Steel spheres were shot at different velocities on square GRC samples. The residual velocity of the projectiles was obtained both using a high speed camera with multiframe exposure and measuring the projectile’s penetration depth in molding clay blocks. Tests were performed on young and artificially aged GRC samples to compare GRC’s behavior when subjected to high strain rates. Numerical simulations using a hydrocode were made to analyze which parameters are most important during an impact event. GRC impact strength was obtained from test results. Also, GRC’s embrittlement, caused by GRC aging, has no influence on GRC impact behavior due to the small size of the projectile. Also, glass fibers used in GRC production only maintain GRC panels’ integrity but have no influence on GRC’s impact strength. Numerical models have reproduced accurately impact tests.

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Los ensayos virtuales de materiales compuestos han aparecido como un nuevo concepto dentro de la industria aeroespacial, y disponen de un vasto potencial para reducir los enormes costes de certificación y desarrollo asociados con las tediosas campañas experimentales, que incluyen un gran número de paneles, subcomponentes y componentes. El objetivo de los ensayos virtuales es sustituir algunos ensayos por simulaciones computacionales con alta fidelidad. Esta tesis es una contribución a la aproximación multiescala desarrollada en el Instituto IMDEA Materiales para predecir el comportamiento mecánico de un laminado de material compuesto dadas las propiedades de la lámina y la intercara. La mecánica de daño continuo (CDM) formula el daño intralaminar a nivel constitutivo de material. El modelo de daño intralaminar se combina con elementos cohesivos para representar daño interlaminar. Se desarrolló e implementó un modelo de daño continuo, y se aplicó a configuraciones simples de ensayos en laminados: impactos de baja y alta velocidad, ensayos de tracción, tests a cortadura. El análisis del método y la correlación con experimentos sugiere que los métodos son razonablemente adecuados para los test de impacto, pero insuficientes para el resto de ensayos. Para superar estas limitaciones de CDM, se ha mejorado la aproximación discreta de elementos finitos enriqueciendo la cinemática para incluir discontinuidades embebidas: el método extendido de los elementos finitos (X-FEM). Se adaptó X-FEM para un esquema explícito de integración temporal. El método es capaz de representar cualitativamente los mecanismos de fallo detallados en laminados. Sin embargo, los resultados muestran inconsistencias en la formulación que producen resultados cuantitativos erróneos. Por último, se ha revisado el método tradicional de X-FEM, y se ha desarrollado un nuevo método para superar sus limitaciones: el método cohesivo X-FEM estable. Las propiedades del nuevo método se estudiaron en detalle, y se concluyó que el método es robusto para implementación en códigos explícitos dinámicos escalables, resultando una nueva herramienta útil para la simulación de daño en composites. Virtual testing of composite materials has emerged as a new concept within the aerospace industry. It presents a very large potential to reduce the large certification costs and the long development times associated with the experimental campaigns, involving the testing of a large number of panels, sub-components and components. The aim of virtual testing is to replace some experimental tests by high-fidelity numerical simulations. This work is a contribution to the multiscale approach developed in Institute IMDEA Materials to predict the mechanical behavior of a composite laminate from the properties of the ply and the interply. Continuum Damage Mechanics (CDM) formulates intraply damage at the the material constitutive level. Intraply CDM is combined with cohesive elements to model interply damage. A CDM model was developed, implemented, and applied to simple mechanical tests of laminates: low and high velocity impact, tension of coupons, and shear deformation. The analysis of the results and the comparison with experiments indicated that the performance was reasonably good for the impact tests, but insuficient in the other cases. To overcome the limitations of CDM, the kinematics of the discrete finite element approximation was enhanced to include mesh embedded discontinuities, the eXtended Finite Element Method (X-FEM). The X-FEM was adapted to an explicit time integration scheme and was able to reproduce qualitatively the physical failure mechanisms in a composite laminate. However, the results revealed an inconsistency in the formulation that leads to erroneous quantitative results. Finally, the traditional X-FEM was reviewed, and a new method was developed to overcome its limitations, the stable cohesive X-FEM. The properties of the new method were studied in detail, and it was demonstrated that the new method was robust and can be implemented in a explicit finite element formulation, providing a new tool for damage simulation in composite materials.

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The deformation and failure micromechanisms of a hybrid 3D woven composite were studied in tension. Plain and open-hole composite coupons were tested in tension until failure in the fill and warp directions, as well as fiber tows extracted from the dry fabric and impregnated with the matrix. The macroscopic evolution of damage in the composite coupons was assessed by means of periodic unloading–reloading (to obtain the elastic modulus and the residual strain), whereas the microscopic mechanism were established by means of X-ray computed microtomography. To this end, specimens were periodically removed from the mechanical testing machine and infiltrated with ZnI-containing liquid to assess the main damage modes as a function of the applied strain. The experimental observations and the predictions of an isostrain model were used to understand the key factors controlling the elastic modulus, strength and notch sensitivity of hybrid 3D woven composites in tension. It was found that the full contribution of the glass fibers to the composite strength was not employed, due to the premature fracture of the carbon fibers, but their presence increased the fracture strain and the energy dissipated during fracture. Thus, hybridization of the 3D woven composite led to a notch-insensitive behavior as demonstrated by open-hole tests