Failure simulations of open-hole and unnotched IM7/977-3 coupons subjected to quasi-static loading using Autodesk Helius PFA

2016 ◽  
Vol 51 (10) ◽  
pp. 1421-1432 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard W Dalgarno ◽  
Jason E Action ◽  
Donald H Robbins ◽  
Stephen P Engelstad

Finite element simulations of three laminates in open-hole and unnotched configurations subjected to tension and compression quasi-static loading are investigated as part of the Damage Tolerant Design Principles program organized by the Air Force Research Laboratory. The coupons are made from unidirectional IM7/977-3 plies, which are a composite material composed of intermediate modulus carbon fibers and a toughened epoxy matrix. Blind simulations of coupon stiffness, nominal coupon stress at failure and damage evolution are benchmarked against experimental measurements and X-rays. The blind simulations are followed by a second round of simulations where the modeling strategy is modified to improve agreement between the simulations and experiments. In the present article, the commercial software Autodesk Helius PFA is used to model the non-linear response of the composite material. Within Helius PFA, failure is evaluated at the constituent level by extracting the fiber and matrix volume average stress state from the homogenized composite stress state. The relationships between the composite and constituents are developed using multicontinuum theory and a high-fidelity micromechanics model.

2016 ◽  
Vol 51 (15) ◽  
pp. 2119-2129 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard W Dalgarno ◽  
Jason E Action ◽  
Donald H Robbins ◽  
Stephen P Engelstad

Finite element simulations of three laminates in open-hole configuration subjected to constant amplitude tension–tension fatigue loading are investigated as part of the Damage Tolerant Design Principles program organized by the Air Force Research Laboratory. All coupons were made from unidirectional IM7/977-3 plies, which are composed of intermediate modulus carbon fibers and a toughened epoxy matrix. Government furnished experimental data from an assortment of fatigue loaded unnotched coupons were used to characterize the behavior of the composite material in the simulations. The commercial software Autodesk Helius PFA was used to model the non-linear response of the material. Blind simulations of coupon stiffness and damage at several cycle numbers and residual coupon tensile and compressive strengths are benchmarked against experimental measurements and X-rays. Upon review of the experimental results, a second round of simulations was performed where the modeling strategy was updated to improve correlation to experiment.


2016 ◽  
Vol 51 (10) ◽  
pp. 1493-1524 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen P Engelstad ◽  
Stephen B Clay

This paper provides overall comparisons of the static results of an Air Force Research Laboratory exploration into the state of the art of existing technology in composite progressive damage analysis. In this study, blind and re-calibration bench-marking exercises were performed using nine different composite progressive damage analysis codes on unnotched and notched (open-hole) composite coupons under both static and fatigue loading. This paper summarizes the results of the static portion of this program. Comparisons are made herein of specimen stiffness and strength predictions against each other and the test data. Overall percent error data is presented, as well as a list of observations and lessons learned during this year-long effort.


2017 ◽  
Vol 51 (15) ◽  
pp. 2181-2202 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saber DorMohammdi ◽  
Cody Godines ◽  
Frank Abdi ◽  
Dade Huang ◽  
Massimiliano Repupilli ◽  
...  

Virtual testing has lately gained widespread acceptance among scientists as a simple, accurate, and reproducible method to determine the mechanical properties of heterogeneous microstructures, early in the production process. As a result of the rapid expansion of the use of composites in aerospace design, virtual testing techniques are, in fact, deemed extremely useful to eliminate unnecessary tests and to reduce cost and time associated with generating allowables for lengthy lifing analyses of structures. Leveraging on a limited set of experimental data, a Progressive Failure Analysis can accurately predict the life and safety of a component/assembly, simply tapping on the physics of its micro-/macro- mechanics material properties, manufacturing processes, and service environments. The robust methodology is showcased using blind predictions of fatigue stiffness degradation and residual strength in tension and compression after fatigue compared with test data from Lockheed Martin Aeronautics and Air Force Research Laboratory). The multi-scale progressive failure analysis methodology in the GENOA software considers uncertainties and defects and evaluated the damage and fracture evolution of three IM7-977-3 laminated composite layups at room temperature. The onset and growth of composite damage was predicted and compared with X-ray CT. After blind predictions, recalibrations were performed with knowledge of the test data using the same set of inputs for all layups and simulations. Damage and fracture mechanism evolution/tracking throughout the cyclic loading is achieved by an integrated multi-scale progressive failure analysis extended FEM solution: (a) damage tracking predicts percentage contributing translaminar and interlaminar failure type, initiation, propagation, crack growth path, and observed shift in failure modes, and (b) fracture mechanics (VCCT, DCZM) predicts crack growth (Crack Tip Energy Release Rate vs. Crack Length), and delamination. The predictive methodology is verified using a building block validation strategy that uses: (a) composite material characterization and qualification (MCQ) software, and (b) the GENOA multi-scale progressive failure analysis fatigue life, stiffness degradation, and post-fatigue strength predictions for open-hole specimens under tension/compression at RTD. The unidirectional tension, compression, and in-plane shear lamina properties supplied by Lockheed Martin Aeronautics and the Air Force Research Laboratory (based on the D3039, D638, D3518 tests) were used by MCQ to reverse engineer effective fiber and matrix static and fatigue properties for the IM7-977-3 material system. The use of constituent properties identified the root cause problem for composite failure and enabled the detection of damage at the micro-scale of the material where damage is incepted. For all three case studies (namely, layups [0/45/90/−45]2s, [+60, 0, −60]3s, and [+30, +60, 90, −60, −30]2s), the blind predictions on the fatigue stiffness degradation and residual strength of the open-hole coupon in tension/compression under cyclic loading (with R = 0.1) at RTD were evaluated using a FE mesh (made of 2k shell elements), in which only one shell element, containing all plies, was employed through the thickness. The results of all analyses correlated very well with the tests, including the damage micro-graphs generated during the cyclic loading.


Author(s):  
J Scott Thompson ◽  
Douglas D Hodson

Simulation approaches generally fall into two categories: discrete time or discrete event. For military modeling and simulation needs, the two approaches typically align with virtual simulation, which implies human interaction with the simulation program, and constructive simulation, which implies no human interaction. The Air Force Research Laboratory develops and distributes AFSIM (Advanced Framework for Simulation, Integration, and Modeling) to a user community that uses both virtual and constructive simulation. This paper documents the software design and primary algorithms that provide AFSIM’s support for both modes, which is termed a hybrid simulation.


2015 ◽  
Vol 180 (10S) ◽  
pp. 67-75 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicholas J. DelRaso ◽  
Victor T. Chan ◽  
Camilla A. Mauzy ◽  
Pavel A. Shiyanov

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