Expanding Puck and Schürmann Inter Fiber Fracture Criterion for Fiber Reinforced Thermoplastic 3D-Printed Composite Materials
Journal article, 2020

The present work expands the application of Puck and Schürmann Inter-Fiber Fracture criterion to fiber reinforced thermoplastic 3D-printed composite materials. The effect of the ratio between the transverse compressive strength and the in-plane shear strength is discussed and a new transition point between the fracture conditions under compressive loading is proposed. The recommended values of the inclination parameters, as well as their effects on the proposed method, are also discussed. Failure envelopes are presented for different 3D-printed materials and also for traditional composite materials. The failure envelopes obtained here are compared to those provided by the original Puck and Schürmann criterion and to those provided by Gu and Chen. The differences between them are analyzed with the support of geometrical techniques and also statistical tools. It is demonstrated that the Expanded Puck and Schürmann is capable of providing more suitable failure envelopes for fiber reinforced thermoplastic 3D-printed composite materials in addition to traditional semi-brittle, brittle and intrinsically brittle composite materials.

additive manufacturing

failure of composites

puck and schürmann failure criterion

3D-printed composite materials

Author

Thiago Dutra

LEL-Lightweight Structures Laboratory, IPT-Institute for Technological Research

GPMA-Research Group on Additive Manufacturing, DCTA ITA IEM, ITA-Aeronautics Institute of Technology

Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Material and Computational Mechanics

Rafael Thiago Luiz Ferreira

GPMA-Research Group on Additive Manufacturing, DCTA ITA IEM, ITA-Aeronautics Institute of Technology

Hugo Borelli Resende

GPMA-Research Group on Additive Manufacturing, DCTA ITA IEM, ITA-Aeronautics Institute of Technology

Brina Blinzler

Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Material and Computational Mechanics

Ragnar Larsson

Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Material and Computational Mechanics

Materials

19961944 (eISSN)

Vol. 13 7 1653

Subject Categories

Manufacturing, Surface and Joining Technology

Metallurgy and Metallic Materials

Condensed Matter Physics

Infrastructure

C3SE (Chalmers Centre for Computational Science and Engineering)

DOI

10.3390/ma13071653

More information

Latest update

4/22/2020