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Recent progress on damage mechanisms in polymeric adhesively bonded high-performance composite joints under fatigue

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 03:27 authored by Sheriff Olatubosun Olajide, Benedicta Arhatari
A prominent critical problem with the use of adhesively bonded composite scarf joint in aircraft structures is their susceptibility to unpredictable failure. Any efficient and robust design approach for adhesively bonded scarf joints under fatigue loading should account for the damage mechanisms in the joint and this cannot be achieved without understanding damage development with initiation and propagation. Research into damage development using methodical approach were conducted on the stiffness of polymer adhesively bonded composite scarf joint since it is the prime physical parameter that can be measured most accurately. The research produced significant new knowledge of damage development under fatigue as strain hardening and a methodology to characterize damage initiation and propagation in adhesively bonded joints. Under uninterrupted fatigue, stiffness degradation and plasticity effects led to strain hardening of the joint adhesive until failure. But there was in-homogenous stiffness degradation in regions within the joint due to defects and anomalies so that the general stiffness degradation of the scarf joint could be either a stiffness increase or decrease to failure. The changes in the rate of stiffness over the fatigue life of a scarf joint reveal three characteristic regions. Region I & II marked the damage initiation life of scarf joints and this was (66 ± 9)% of the fatigue life for specimens tested, and Region III marked the onset of damage propagation to failure. Mean strain effect was evident in some scarf joint under fatigue cycle. It is shown that the damage initiation & propagation life under variable and constant fatigue loading for scarf joints is independent of the adhesive thickness, the fatigue load application frequency, and the severity of the applied load. Damage propagation in adhesively bonded scarf joint was found to be a combination (1) strain hardening of the adhesive layer leading to brittle cracking of

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1016/j.ijfatigue.2016.10.009
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 01421123

Journal

International Journal of Fatigue

Volume

95

Start page

45

End page

63

Total pages

19

Publisher

Elsevier Ltd

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2016 Elsevier Ltd

Former Identifier

2006071690

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-03-29

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