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Material Characterization for the Analysis of Skin/Stiffener Separation

CARLOS G DÁVILA, FRANK A. LEONE, KYONGCHAN SONG, JAMES G. RATCLIFFE, CHERYL A. ROSE

Abstract


Test results show that separation failure in co-cured skin/stiffener interfaces is characterized by dense networks of interacting cracks and crack path migrations that are not present in standard characterization tests for delamination. These crack networks result in measurable large-scale and sub-ply-scale R curve toughening mechanisms, such as fiber bridging, crack migration, and crack delving. Consequently, a number of unknown issues exist regarding the level of analysis detail that is required for sufficient predictive fidelity. The objective of the present paper is to examine some of the difficulties associated with modeling separation failure in stiffened composite structures. A procedure to characterize the interfacial material properties is proposed and the use of simplified models based on empirical interface properties is evaluated.


DOI
10.12783/asc2017/15407

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