A Methodology to Predict Damage Initiation, Damage Growth, and Residual Strength in Titanium Matrix Composites
Author(s) -
JG Bakuckas,
WS Johnson
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
nasa technical reports server (nasa)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Book series
DOI - 10.1520/stp18238s
Subject(s) - composite material , materials science , residual strength , matrix (chemical analysis) , titanium , metallurgy
In this research, a methodology to predict damage initiation, damage growth, fatigue life, and residual strength in titanium matrix composites (TMC) is outlined. Emphasis was placed on micromechanics-based engineering approaches. Damage initiation was predicted using a local effective strain approach. A finite element analysis verified the prevailing assumptions made in the formulation of this model. Damage growth, namely, fiber-bridged matrix crack growth, was evaluated using a fiber bridging (FB) model which accounts for thermal residual stresses. This model combines continuum fracture mechanics and micromechanics analyses yielding stress-intensity factor solutions for fiber-bridged matrix cracks. It is assumed in the FB model that fibers in the wake of the matrix crack are idealized as a closure pressure, and an unknown constant frictional shear stress is assumed to act along the debond length of the bridging fibers. This frictional shear stress was used as a curve fitting parameter to the available experimental data. Fatigue life and post-fatigue residual strength were predicted based on the axial stress in the first intact 0 degree fiber calculated using the FB model and a three-dimensional finite element analysis.
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