Effect of Stress Ratio on Fatigue Behaviour of Non-Crimp Fabric Composites at Room and Elevated Temperatures
0205 materials engineering
02 engineering and technology
DOI:
10.1007/s10443-020-09817-3
Publication Date:
2020-06-11T14:03:00Z
AUTHORS (6)
ABSTRACT
The fatigue behaviour of a biaxial carbon/epoxy Non-Crimp-Fabric (NCF) composite is evaluated at room temperature and 130o C for automotive applications. A new specimen geometry is developed allowing three stress ratios R = 0.1, R = −1 and R = 10 to be tested at 130o C without the use of anti-buckling fixtures for axial loadings. The three stress ratios show good agreement in fatigue life using an equivalent stress amplitude. The fracture surfaces from failed fatigue test specimens are compared to those of monotonic loading to evaluate the changes to failure modes under the different loading conditions. Tensile dominated loading such as uniaxial tension and fatigue testing with R = 0.1 result in delamination of the NCF material coupled with fibre failure along the loading direction as the primary failure modes. Compressive fatigue failures at 130 °C occur at an inclined angle through thickness due to a shearing process along with fibre kinking. The matrix material exhibits more ductile characteristics at 130o C altering the fracture surfaces at elevated temperature.
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