Litcius/Paper detail

Evaluation of Single-Lap and Block Shear Test Methods in Adhesively Bonded Composite Joints

Alec Redmann, Vinay Damodaran, Felix Tischer, Pavana Prabhakar, Tim A. Osswald

2021Journal of Composites Science43 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Adhesive bonding is increasingly being used for composite structures, especially in aerospace and automotive industries. One common joint configuration used to test adhesive strength is the single-lap shear joint, which has been widely studied and shown to produce significant normal (peeling) stresses. When bonding composite structures, the normal stresses are capable of causing delamination before the adhesive bond fails, providing inconclusive engineering data regarding the bonding strength. An alternative test is the block shear joint, which uses a shorter sample geometry and a compressive-shear loading to reduce normal stresses. Analytical models proposed by Goland and Reissner and Hart-Smith are used to compare the edge-bending moment for the two joint configurations. The stress distributions along the bondline are also compared using finite element analysis. Experimental tests are conducted to evaluate these analyses and the failure modes of each configuration are recorded. Block shear samples demonstrate a joint strength over 100% higher than single-lap shear specimen bonded with the same adhesive material. The lower joint strength measured in single-lap shear is found to be potentially misleading due to delamination of the composite adherend.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceComposite materialJoint (building)AdhesiveShear (geology)Composite numberStructural engineeringDirect shear testLap jointDelamination (geology)Finite element methodShear strength (soil)Adhesive bondingBending momentEngineeringGeologySoil waterLayer (electronics)Soil scienceSubductionTectonicsPaleontologyMechanical Behavior of CompositesStructural Load-Bearing AnalysisComposite Structure Analysis and Optimization