Fragmentation of Beaded Fibres in a Composite

Materials (Basel). 2022 Jan 24;15(3):890. doi: 10.3390/ma15030890.

Abstract

The fibre-matrix interface plays an important role in the overall mechanical behaviour of a fibre-reinforced composite, but the classical approach to improving the interface through chemical sizing is bounded by the materials' properties. By contrast, structural and/or geometrical modification of the interface may provide mechanical interlocking and have wider possibilities and benefits. Here we investigate the introduction of polymer beads along the interface of a fibre and validate their contribution by a single fibre fragmentation test. Using glass fibres and the same epoxy system for both matrix and beads, an increase of 17.5% is observed in the interfacial shear strength of the beaded fibres compared to fibres with no polymer beads. This increase should lead to a similar improvement in the strength and toughness of a beaded fibre composite when short fibres are used. The beads were also seen to stabilise the fragmentation process of a fibre by reducing the scatter in fragment density at a given strain. A case could also be made for a critical beads number-4 beads in our experimental system-to describe interfacial shear strength, analogous to a critical length used in fibre composites.

Keywords: beaded fibre composite; fragmentation test; interface; mechanical interlocking; structural modification.