Design and analysis of repairs for fibre metal composites

GLARE is a material that has recently gained wide commercial approval with its use on the Airbus A380 fuselage. A project was undertaken, following prior work by Tan J.H. (2010), to gain progress towards an eventual aim of a repair scheme for GLARE, supported by FEM analysis and physical testing. Ta...

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Main Author: Tan, Ambrose Yong Xiang.
Other Authors: Sunil Chandrakant Joshi
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/46377
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-463772023-03-04T18:22:58Z Design and analysis of repairs for fibre metal composites Tan, Ambrose Yong Xiang. Sunil Chandrakant Joshi School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering DRNTU::Engineering::Aeronautical engineering::Materials of construction GLARE is a material that has recently gained wide commercial approval with its use on the Airbus A380 fuselage. A project was undertaken, following prior work by Tan J.H. (2010), to gain progress towards an eventual aim of a repair scheme for GLARE, supported by FEM analysis and physical testing. Tan determined the type of repair to be used (a stepped-lap bonded repair), and the following report outlines the results of the project with regards to FEM analysis, machining and physical testing. The FEM analysis qualitatively compared two bond step lengths and five different adhesive “geometries” at highly-stressed areas in the bond line, while the physical testing compared the step lengths. The “geometries” suggested that some excess overlap of adhesive beyond the bond line could be desirable, while the step lengths were found to have little or no effect on stress loading that could be withstood, and the repair itself was able to safely withstand flying conditions. A certain consistent failure behaviour was also observed during physical testing involving fracture in an unexpected location. Experience was also gained in this project with machining GLARE to a quality without delamination, building on Tan’s prior unsuccessful experience, though this area still needs improvement. Based on the results from the various project components (FEM, machining and physical testing), possible areas for continuing development towards a repair scheme include an expansion of FEM, an exploration of clamping options during machining, and investigation of step thickness, surface preparation and adhesive types. Bachelor of Engineering (Aerospace Engineering) 2011-12-05T07:23:04Z 2011-12-05T07:23:04Z 2011 2011 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/46377 en Nanyang Technological University 80 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Aeronautical engineering::Materials of construction
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Aeronautical engineering::Materials of construction
Tan, Ambrose Yong Xiang.
Design and analysis of repairs for fibre metal composites
description GLARE is a material that has recently gained wide commercial approval with its use on the Airbus A380 fuselage. A project was undertaken, following prior work by Tan J.H. (2010), to gain progress towards an eventual aim of a repair scheme for GLARE, supported by FEM analysis and physical testing. Tan determined the type of repair to be used (a stepped-lap bonded repair), and the following report outlines the results of the project with regards to FEM analysis, machining and physical testing. The FEM analysis qualitatively compared two bond step lengths and five different adhesive “geometries” at highly-stressed areas in the bond line, while the physical testing compared the step lengths. The “geometries” suggested that some excess overlap of adhesive beyond the bond line could be desirable, while the step lengths were found to have little or no effect on stress loading that could be withstood, and the repair itself was able to safely withstand flying conditions. A certain consistent failure behaviour was also observed during physical testing involving fracture in an unexpected location. Experience was also gained in this project with machining GLARE to a quality without delamination, building on Tan’s prior unsuccessful experience, though this area still needs improvement. Based on the results from the various project components (FEM, machining and physical testing), possible areas for continuing development towards a repair scheme include an expansion of FEM, an exploration of clamping options during machining, and investigation of step thickness, surface preparation and adhesive types.
author2 Sunil Chandrakant Joshi
author_facet Sunil Chandrakant Joshi
Tan, Ambrose Yong Xiang.
format Final Year Project
author Tan, Ambrose Yong Xiang.
author_sort Tan, Ambrose Yong Xiang.
title Design and analysis of repairs for fibre metal composites
title_short Design and analysis of repairs for fibre metal composites
title_full Design and analysis of repairs for fibre metal composites
title_fullStr Design and analysis of repairs for fibre metal composites
title_full_unstemmed Design and analysis of repairs for fibre metal composites
title_sort design and analysis of repairs for fibre metal composites
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/46377
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