Impact study of composite scarf joints with interspersed particles

In this Final Year Project (FYP), the impact properties of scarf repair were enhanced with the application of Core Shell Polymer (CSP) particles at a density of 30g/m2 to the interply interfaces of the central repair patch. The application of CSP particles is expected to improve impact properties th...

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Main Author: Tan, Adrian Tze En
Other Authors: Sunil Chandrakant Joshi
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2013
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/53986
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-539862023-03-04T19:18:02Z Impact study of composite scarf joints with interspersed particles Tan, Adrian Tze En Sunil Chandrakant Joshi School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering DRNTU::Engineering In this Final Year Project (FYP), the impact properties of scarf repair were enhanced with the application of Core Shell Polymer (CSP) particles at a density of 30g/m2 to the interply interfaces of the central repair patch. The application of CSP particles is expected to improve impact properties through 2 mechanisms; 1) improving elastic energy absorption which has the greatest potential of reducing extent of damage in a laminate and 2) reduction or elimination of stiffness mismatch faced in a typical scarf repair. In the first phase of the project, the ability of CSP particles to enhance elastic energy absorption was looked at. Glass Fiber Reinforced Polymer (GFRP) samples, both reference and CSP-modified, were impact tested with energy of 17J and 12.5J. A reduction in elastic energy absorption in the modified samples at 17J coupled with an increase in elastic energy absorption at a lower energy of 12.5J, served to suggest that the CSP particles have an elastic limit beyond which the effectiveness of the particles to improve elastic energy absorption is reduced. In the second phase of the FYP, the modeling of reduction in stiffness mismatch was performed. In order to do so, 4-point bending tests were first carried out to measure the stiffness values of GFRP and Carbon Fiber Reinforced Polymer (CFRP) and quantify the drop in stiffness due to incorporation of CSP particles to the interply interfaces. It was found that CFRP has higher stiffness than GFRP. Accordingly, CFRP was used as the repair patch to a parent GFRP structure. This stiffness mismatch was reduced with the incorporation of CSP particles to the CFRP repair patch. Fabrication and impact testing were then carried out for the hybrid samples, both reference and CSP-modified. However, the use of a stiffer CFRP leads to a stronger scarf repair. This altered the impact response of the reference samples from super-critical to sub-critical. In the sub-critical range, CSP particles were observed to have limited effects on the impact properties of the scarf repair. Bachelor of Engineering (Aerospace Engineering) 2013-06-11T03:45:46Z 2013-06-11T03:45:46Z 2013 2013 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/53986 en Nanyang Technological University 91 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
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering
Tan, Adrian Tze En
Impact study of composite scarf joints with interspersed particles
description In this Final Year Project (FYP), the impact properties of scarf repair were enhanced with the application of Core Shell Polymer (CSP) particles at a density of 30g/m2 to the interply interfaces of the central repair patch. The application of CSP particles is expected to improve impact properties through 2 mechanisms; 1) improving elastic energy absorption which has the greatest potential of reducing extent of damage in a laminate and 2) reduction or elimination of stiffness mismatch faced in a typical scarf repair. In the first phase of the project, the ability of CSP particles to enhance elastic energy absorption was looked at. Glass Fiber Reinforced Polymer (GFRP) samples, both reference and CSP-modified, were impact tested with energy of 17J and 12.5J. A reduction in elastic energy absorption in the modified samples at 17J coupled with an increase in elastic energy absorption at a lower energy of 12.5J, served to suggest that the CSP particles have an elastic limit beyond which the effectiveness of the particles to improve elastic energy absorption is reduced. In the second phase of the FYP, the modeling of reduction in stiffness mismatch was performed. In order to do so, 4-point bending tests were first carried out to measure the stiffness values of GFRP and Carbon Fiber Reinforced Polymer (CFRP) and quantify the drop in stiffness due to incorporation of CSP particles to the interply interfaces. It was found that CFRP has higher stiffness than GFRP. Accordingly, CFRP was used as the repair patch to a parent GFRP structure. This stiffness mismatch was reduced with the incorporation of CSP particles to the CFRP repair patch. Fabrication and impact testing were then carried out for the hybrid samples, both reference and CSP-modified. However, the use of a stiffer CFRP leads to a stronger scarf repair. This altered the impact response of the reference samples from super-critical to sub-critical. In the sub-critical range, CSP particles were observed to have limited effects on the impact properties of the scarf repair.
author2 Sunil Chandrakant Joshi
author_facet Sunil Chandrakant Joshi
Tan, Adrian Tze En
format Final Year Project
author Tan, Adrian Tze En
author_sort Tan, Adrian Tze En
title Impact study of composite scarf joints with interspersed particles
title_short Impact study of composite scarf joints with interspersed particles
title_full Impact study of composite scarf joints with interspersed particles
title_fullStr Impact study of composite scarf joints with interspersed particles
title_full_unstemmed Impact study of composite scarf joints with interspersed particles
title_sort impact study of composite scarf joints with interspersed particles
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/53986
_version_ 1759854947056222208