Compressive properties of thin tow-based discontinuous composites
Journal article, 2024

Ultra-thin tow-based discontinuous composites are an emerging class of composite materials which can be used for high performance applications in a wide range of industries. They offer significant advantages compared to continuous composites, such as reduced waste material, enhanced formability and even increased mechanical properties. However, the properties of composite materials under compression are often a limiting factor in structural design. Measuring the compressive properties of composites is also non-trivial, as premature failures are occurring often with the existing testing standards. Finally, the compressive response of discontinuous composites is currently unclear as the existing studies are limited. This work presents a full experimental campaign on the characterization of the compressive response of ultra-thin tow-based discontinuous composites. A uniaxial test is initially employed which reveals instabilities, premature failures and large experimental scatter. Afterwards, a sandwich beam bending test is employed which allows to measure the compressive properties accurately with low variability. The compressive strains measured exceed 1 %, which is also the tensile limit for this material. The agreement between the tensile and compressive strength was investigated by using scanning electron microscopy which revealed that the damage was controlled by matrix deformation in the tow interfaces.

sandwich beam bending

damage characterisation

fractography

Compressive testing

Tow-based discontinuous composites

Author

Ioannis Katsivalis

Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Material and Computational Mechanics

Aree Tongloet

University of Bristol

Xun Wu

University of Bristol

Monica Norrby

Royal Institute of Technology (KTH)

Florence Moreau

Oxeon AB

Soraia Pimenta

Imperial College London

Michael R. Wisnom

University of Bristol

Dan Zenkert

Royal Institute of Technology (KTH)

Leif Asp

Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Material and Computational Mechanics

Composites Part B: Engineering

1359-8368 (ISSN)

Vol. 292 112085

Vehicle On-board storage integrating Liquid ANd compressed hydrogen Tanks (VOLANT)

Chalmers (Dnr C 2021-0040), 2022-01-01 -- 2023-12-31.

Subject Categories (SSIF 2011)

Mechanical Engineering

Materials Engineering

DOI

10.1016/j.compositesb.2024.112085

More information

Latest update

1/17/2025