Current Topics:
Test Method Development:
Validation:
Crack migration in polymer matrix composites is a commonly observed process in which delamination transitions into intralaminar fracture due to ply-level shear loading. To date, several studies have attempted to reproduce this failure process in an experimental setting; however, most efforts have found crack migration difficult to control, resulting in variability in the observed damage morphology and the associated specimen response. The objective of this work is to develop a new experiment that enables direct control of crack migration based on the end-loaded split (ELS) test configuration and a custom dual-actuator load frame. A non-standard hybrid ELS specimen geometry was used, containing a core of 90° tape plies placed at the specimen’s midplane and bounded by plain-weave fabric plies. The fabric plies were used to constrain the crack migration process to the core plies and to stabilize the pre- and post-migration delamination growth at the tape/fabric interface. The crack migration process in the specimens was controlled by changing the direction of the ELS loading, which alters the sign of the local shear stress that drives fracture. Experimental tests were performed to initiate repeatable and controllable single migrations and multiple consecutive migrations. The experiments were simulated using the BSAM progressive damage analysis tool, demonstrating good agreement between the experimental and numerically derived global force-displacement responses, the locations of major migration events, and the delamination growth rate. Differences in the observed and simulated fracture patterns are analyzed and discussed to inform future developments of the experimental and computational methods described herein.
Method Development:
Novel Composite Systems:
Extreme Temperatures:
Durability and Damage Tolerance:
Past Research Projects
Title: Novel Experimental and Numerical Tools for Accelerated Qualification and Certification of Bonded Composite Structures Containing Defects and Manufacturing Variability
Sponsor: NASA Transformational Tools and Technologies Project
UCL investigators: Brady Brajavich, Shawn Weeks
Sponsor: Air Force Research Lab through a subcontract with the National Institute for Aviation Research
UCL investigators: Chris Dahlkamp
Sponsor: NASA Headquarters, Space Technology Mission Directorate
UCL investigators: Joseph Nichols, John Fisher
Project website: http://us-comp.com
Sponsor: National Science Foundation
UCL investigators: Kris Matheson
Title: Investigation and Evaluation of Composite Repair
Sponsor: Air Force Research Laboratory
UCL investigators: Dallan Barnes, Nicholas Dorsett
Title: 3D imaging of damage in biaxially loaded composites at cryogenic temperatures using a novel micro-CT experiment
Sponsor: NASA Space Technology Research Fellowship
UCL investigators: Jordan French
Title: Micromechanical testing and modeling of fiber-reinforced polymeric composites
Sponsor: NASA Langley Research Center
UCL investigators: Caitlin Arndt, Austin Smith
Title:Experimental characterization and computational design of additively manufactured multifunctional nanocomposites
Sponsor: NASA Langley Research Center
UCL investigators: Devin Young