Compositess A 23 2
Compositess A 23 2
carbon fibers
Reading assignment
Askeland and Phule, “The Science and Engineering of
Materials”, 4th Edition, Ch. 16.
Shakelford, “Introduction to Materials Science for
Engineers”, 6th Edition, Ch. 14.
Chung, “Composite Materials”, Ch. 2.
Chung, “Carbon Fiber Composites”, Ch. 1, 2 and 3.
Hull made of a sandwich composite
Exterior: Kevlar fiber epoxy-matrix composite
Interior: Polyvinyl chloride foam
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Lightning strike
resistance
Fatigue resistance
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Glass fibers
A carbon
fiber tow
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Glass fiber polymer-matrix composite
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Through-
thickness
direction
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license.
epoxy composites.
strength of E-glass fiber-reinforced
Effect of fiber orientation on the tensile
Size distribution of particles used as
reinforcement
Single fiber tensile
strength
Carbon fiber 3.5 GPa
Kevlar fiber 3.6 GPa
E-glass fiber 3.4 GPa
Steel 1.3 GPa
Specific strength
Carbon fiber 2.00 GPa
Kevlar fiber 2.50 GPa
E-glass fiber 1.31 GPa
Steel 0.17 GPa
Single fiber tensile
modulus
Carbon fiber 230 GPa
Kevlar fiber 60 GPa
E-glass fiber 22 GPa
Steel 210 GPa
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Short fiber
Long fiber
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Unidirectional composite
Isostrain
condition
Longitudinal direction
Pc = Pm + Pf
c Ac = m Am + f A f
For isostrain condition ( c = m = f )
Ec c Ac = Em m Am + E f f A f
Am Af
Ec = E m + Ef
Ac Ac
Ec = m E m + f E f
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Pf f Af E f f Af E f
= = = f
Pc c Ac Ec c Ac Ec
Isostress
condition
Transverse
direction
Isostress condition
c = m = f
Lc = Lm + L f
Lc Lm L f
= +
Lc Lc Lc
Lm = Am Lc
L f = Af Lc
Lc Am Lm A f L f
= +
Lc Lm Lf
c = m m + f f
For isostress condition ( = Ec c = Em m = E f f ),
σ
= m + f
Ec Em Ef
1 m f
= +
Ec E m E f
Em E f
Ec =
m E f + f Em
XmX f
Xc =
m X f + f X m
E = t E + h E
n
c l
n n
h
n = 1 Isostrain
n = -1 Isostress
Polymer matrix
Glass fiber reinforcement
Poor bonding Good bonding
Failure mechanisms
Failure in fibers (ductile-matrix composites,
e.g., polymer-matrix and metal-
matrix composites), so a high
interfacial strength is desired.
Failure in matrix (brittle-matrix composites,
e.g., ceramic-matrix and carbon-
matrix composites), so a low
interfacial strength is desired (to allow
cracks to deflect along fiber-matrix
interface, thereby allowing fibers to
pull out for the purpose of increasing
the toughness)
Matrix Fiber Fiber pull-out
Two failure modes in ceramic-ceramic composites:
(a) Extensive pull-out of SiC fibers in a glass matrix
provides good composite toughness (x20). (b)
Bridging of some fibers across a crack enhances
the toughness of a ceramic-matrix composite
(unknown magnification).
Fracture toughness
Increased by reinforcement
Specific strength = strength/density
Reasons for fiber-matrix
interface engineering
Thermoplastic-matrix
composites
Thermoset-matrix composites
Lower manufacturing cost of
thermoplastic-matrix
composites
no cure
unlimited shelf-life
reprocessing possible (for repair and recycling)
less health risks due to chemicals during
processing
low moisture content
thermal shaping possible
weldability (fusion bonding possible)
Better performance of
thermoplastic-matrix
composites
low friction coefficient and good wear resistance (a 40 wt.% short carbon
fiber nylon-matrix composite has a friction coefficient nearly as low as
Teflon and unlubricated wear properties approaching those of lubricated
steel)
toughness and damage tolerance (can be designed by using laminate
orientation to be tougher and much more damage tolerant than metals)
chemical resistance (chemical resistance controlled by the polymer matrix)
corrosion resistance (impervious to corrosion)
Attractive properties of carbon
fiber polymer-matrix composites
Carbon fiber
Carbon matrix
Carbon matrix made
from pitch or polymer
Carbon matrix
precursors
Pitch
Resins
Carbonaceous gases
Properties of graphite
Anisotropic
Easy shear between carbon layers
limiting the strength
High electrical and thermal
conductivity and high modulus in the
plane of the carbon layers
Carbon nanotube
Graphite
Diamond
Fullerene
Nanofiber group
morphology
Intertwined
Parallel
Fabrication of
carbon nanofibers
Catalytic growth from
carbonaceous gas
Arc discharge
Laser evaporation
Catalytic method
Carbonaceous gases: acetylene,
ethylene, methane, natural gas,
benzene, etc.
Catalyst: iron, nickel, etc.
(particles typically 10 nm, from
salts or organometallics)
Reducing gases: CO, hydrogen
Methods of making carbon-
carbon
Carbonization, composites
followed by impregnation of pitch
or resin, and repeating the carbonization-
impregnation process again and again until
sufficient density has been attained.
Chemical vapor infiltration (CVI) using a
carbonaceous gas, i.e., CVD under a
temperature/pressure gradient so as to prevent
crust formation, thereby allowing complete
infiltration; CVI can be an extra step that follows
carbonization-impregnation for the purpose of
filling the pores.
Table 2.3 Pitch properties.
Ceramic-ceramic composites
(ceramic-fiber ceramic-matrix
composites)
Better oxidation resistance than
carbon-carbon composites
Technology less matured than
carbon-carbon composite
technology
Examples of ceramic
matrices
Silicon carbide
Silicon nitride
Alumina (aluminum oxide
Al2O3)
Mullite (Al2O3-SiO2)
Glasses