Litcius/Paper detail

Filament wound composite fatigue mechanisms investigated with full field DIC strain monitoring

Eivind Hugaas, Andreas T. Echtermeyer

2021Open Engineering12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Fatigue of filament wound materials was investigated using Digital Image Correlation DIC monitoring every 50 th cycle of a high cycle fatigue test of a split disk ring sample. The ring was cut from a filament wound glass fiber reinforced polymer pressure vessel and had a hole. The strain field redistributed over time, lowering and moving strain concentrations. The redistributive behavior was most extensive in areas that later developed local fiber failure, which soon led to catastrophic failure. Microscopy was carried out on partially fatigued material. Damage evolved as matrix cracks and matrix splitting of groups of fibers and complete debonding of single fibers. This occurred at borders of voids and matrix cracks, easing progressive fiber failure. It was concluded that fatigue in filament wound composites has an extensive matrix damage phase before final failure. Fibers could locally withstand strains close to and above the static failure strain for considerable number of cycles if little local strain field redistribution was observed. The used method was able to detect changes in the strain fields that preceded catastrophic failure. It was concluded that DIC combined with the post processing methods presented may serve as a valuable tool for structural integrity monitoring of composite pressure vessels over time.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceDigital image correlationComposite materialProtein filamentStrain (injury)Composite numberFilament windingCatastrophic failureMatrix (chemical analysis)Structural engineeringMedicineEngineeringInternal medicineMechanical Behavior of CompositesUltrasonics and Acoustic Wave PropagationOptical measurement and interference techniques