Dynamic In-Plane Compression and Fracture Growth in a Quasi-Isotropic Carbon-Fiber-Reinforced Polymer Composite

Materials (Basel). 2024 Dec 23;17(24):6296. doi: 10.3390/ma17246296.

Abstract

This study presents an experimental investigation of the quasi-static and dynamic behavior of a quasi-isotropic carbon-fiber-reinforced composite subjected to in-plane compressive loading. The experiments were performed at strain rates ranging from 4×10-5 to ∼1200 s-1 to quantifythe strain-rate-dependent response, failure propagation, and damage morphology using advanced camera systems. Fiber bridging, kink band formation, dominance of interlaminar failure, and inter-fiber failure fracture planes are evidenced through post-mortem analysis. The evolution of the in-plane compressive strength, failure strength, and stiffness are quantified across the strain rates considered in this study. For an in-depth understanding of the failure propagation, crack speeds were determined in two subsets; (i) primary and secondary cracking, and (ii) the interfaces participating in the crack propagation. Lastly, a modified Zhu-Wang-Tang viscoelastic constitutive model was used to characterize the dynamic stress-strain and compressive behavior of the quasi-isotropic composite under in-plane compression.

Keywords: carbon-fiber-reinforced polymer; crack speed; digital image correlation; fracture plane; highstrain rate; in-plane compression.