Title of article :
Multi-scale dynamic failure prediction tool for marine composite
structures
Author/Authors :
James Lua William Gregory Jagannathan Sankar، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
A high fidelity assessment of accumulative
damage of woven fabric composite structures subjected to
aggressive loadings is strongly reliant on the accurate
characterization of the inherent multi-scale microstructures
and the underlying deformation phenomena. Damage in
composite sandwich and joint structures is characterized by
the coexistence of discrete (delamination) and continuum
damage (matrix cracking and intralaminar damage). A
purely fracture mechanics-based or a purely continuum
damage mechanics-based tool alone cannot effectively
characterize the interaction between the discrete and continuum
damage and their compounding effect that leads to
the final rupture. In this paper, a hybrid discrete and continuum
damage model is developed and numerically
implemented within the LS-DYNA environment via a userdefined
material model. The continuum damage progression
and its associated stiffness degradation are predicted
based on the constituent stress/strain and their associated
failure criteria while the discrete delamination damage is
captured via a cohesive interface model. A multi-scale
computational framework is established to bridge the
response and failure predictions at constituent, ply, and
laminated composite level. The calculated constituent
stress and strain are used in a mechanism-driven failure
criterion to predict the failure mode, failure sequence, and
the synergistic interaction that leads to global stiffness
degradation and the final rupture. The use of the cohesive
interface model can capture the complicated delamination
zone without posing the self-similar crack growth condition.
The unified depiction of the continuum and discrete
damage via the damage mechanics theory provides a
rational way to study the coupling effects between the inplane
and the out-of-plane failure modes. The applicability
and accuracy of the damage models used in the hybrid
dynamic failure prediction tool are demonstrated via its
application to a circular plate and a composite hat stiffener
subjected to shock and low velocity impact loading. The
synergistic interaction between the continuum and discrete
damage is explored via its application to a sandwich beam
subjected to a low velocity impact.
Journal title :
Journal of Materials Science
Journal title :
Journal of Materials Science