Multiscale Progressive Failure Analysis of 3D Woven Composites

Polymers (Basel). 2022 Oct 15;14(20):4340. doi: 10.3390/polym14204340.

Abstract

Application of three-dimensional (3D) woven composites is growing as an alternative to the use of ply-based composite materials. However, the design, analysis, modeling, and optimization of these materials is more challenging due to their complex and inherently multiscale geometries. Herein, a multiscale modeling procedure, based on efficient, semi-analytical micromechanical theories rather than the traditional finite element approach, is presented and applied to a 3D woven carbon-epoxy composite. A crack-band progressive damage model was employed for the matrix constituent to capture the globally observed nonlinear response. Realistic microstructural dimensions and tow-fiber volume fractions were determined from detailed X-ray computed tomography (CT) and scanning electron microscopy data. Pre-existing binder-tow disbonds and weft-tow waviness, observed in X-ray CT scans of the composite, were also included in the model. The results were compared with experimental data for the in-plane tensile and shear behavior of the composite. The tensile predictions exhibited good correlations with the test data. While the model was able to capture the less brittle nature of the in-plane shear response, quantitative measures were underpredicted to some degree.

Keywords: 3D woven composites; X-ray CT; homogenization; method of cells; micromechanics; multiscale modeling; progressive failure.

Grants and funding

This research was funded by the NASA Space Technology Mission Directorate (STMD) Entry Systems Modeling (ESM) and Composite Technologies for Exploration (CTE) projects.