• Title/Summary/Keyword: composite bonded joint

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A Study on the Torque Transmission Characteristics of Adhesively Bonded Composite Drive Shafts (접착제로 접합된 복합재료 구동축의 토크 전달특성에 관한 연구)

  • 김원태;김기수;이대길
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers
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    • v.17 no.8
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    • pp.1980-2000
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    • 1993
  • The stresses and torque transmission capabilities of adhesively bonded circular, hexagonal and elliptical lap joints were analyzed by the finite element and compared with the experimental results. The adherends of the joints were composed of carbon fiber/epoxy composite shafts and steel shafts. In calculating the torque transmission capabilities, the linear laminate properties of the composite material and the nonlinear shear properties of the adhesive were used. Using this method, the torque transmission capabilities of adhesively bonded lap joints could be obtained within 10% error compared to the experimental results except some single lap joints. The experiments revealed that the hexagonal joint had the best torque transmission capability from the single lap joints and the double lap joint had better torque transmission than the single lap joint.

Failure Mode and Strength of Unidirectional Composite Single Lap Bonded Joints I. Experiments (일방향 복합재료 Single Lap접합 조인트의 파손 모드 및 강도 I. 실험)

  • Kim Kwang-Soo;Yoo Jae-Seok;An Jae-Mo;Jang Young-Soon
    • Composites Research
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    • v.17 no.6
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    • pp.14-21
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    • 2004
  • Failure process, mode and strength of unidirectional composite single lap bonded joints were investigated experimentally with respect to bonding methods, those are, co-curing with and without adhesive and secondary bonding. The co-cured joint specimens without adhesive had the largest failure strength. Progressive failures along the adhesive layer occurred in the secondary bonded specimens. In the co-cured specimens with adhesive film which had better material strength and adhesion performance, delamination failure occurred and the joint strengths were less than those of secondary bonded specimens. Delamination failure did not occur in the secondary bonded specimens because of earlier crack growth and progressive failure in the adhesive layer. Therefore, failure strength of composite bonded Joints were not always proportionate to material strength and adhesion performance of the adhesive due to the weakness of delamination in composite materials. The effects of surface roughness, bondline thickness and fillets were also studied on secondary bonded specimens.

Failure Prediction of Composite Single Lap Bonded Joints (복합재료 Single Lap 접합 조인트의 파손 예측)

  • Kim Kwang-Soo;Jang Young-Soon;Yi Yeong-Moo
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society For Composite Materials Conference
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    • 2004.10a
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    • pp.73-77
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    • 2004
  • Failure predictions of composite single-lap bonded joints were performed considering both of composite adherend failure and bondline failure. An elastic-perfectly plastic model of adhesive and a delamination failure criterion are used. The failure prediction results such as failure mode and strength have very good agreements with the test results of joint specimens with various bonding methods and parameters. The influence of variations in the effective strength (that is, adhesion performance) and plastic behavior of adhesive on the failure characteristics of composite bonded joints are investigated numerically. The numerical results show that optimal joint strength is archived when adhesive and delamination failure occur in the same time.

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Design parameters on the tensile load bearing capacity of a co-cured lap joint with steel and carbon fiber/epoxy composite adherends (강철재료와 탄소섬유/에폭시 복합재료를 이용한 동시경화 조인트의 인장하중 전달용량에 미치는 설계변수에 관한 연구)

  • 신금철;이정주
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society For Composite Materials Conference
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    • 2001.05a
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    • pp.172-175
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    • 2001
  • The co-cured Joining method, which is regarded as an adhesively bonded Joining method, is an efficient joining technique because both curing and bonding processes for the composite structures can be achieved simultaneously. It requires neither surface treatment onto the composite adherend nor an additional adhesive joining process because the excess resin, which is extracted from composite materials during consolidation, accomplishes the co-cured Joining process. Since the adhesive of the co-cured joint is the same material as the resin of the composite adherend, the analysis and design of the co-cured joint for composite structures are simpler than those of an adhesively bonded joint, which uses an additional adhesive. In this paper, effects of the manufacturing parameters, namely surface roughness, stacking sequence of the composite adherend, and manufacturing pressure in the autoclave during curing process, on the tensile load bearing capacity of the co-cured single lap joint will be experimentally investigated.

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An experimental and numerical investigation on fatigue of composite and metal aircraft structures

  • Pitta, Siddharth;Rojas, Jose I.;Roure, Francesc;Crespo, Daniel;Wahab, Magd Abdel
    • Steel and Composite Structures
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    • v.43 no.1
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    • pp.19-30
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    • 2022
  • The static strength and fatigue crack resistance of the aircraft skin structures depend on the materials used and joint type. Most of the commercial aircraft's skin panel structures are made from aluminium alloy and carbon fibre reinforced epoxy. In this study, the fatigue resistance of four joint configurations (metal/metal, metal/composite, composite/composite and composite/metal) with riveted, adhesive bonded, and hybrid joining techniques are investigated with experiments and finite element analysis. The fatigue tests were tension-tension because of the typical nature of the loads on aircraft skin panels susceptible of experimenting fatigue. Experiment results suggest that the fatigue life of hybrid joints is superior to adhesive bonded joints, and these in turn much better than conventional riveted joints. Thanks to the fact that, for hybrid joints, the adhesive bond provides better load distribution and ensures load-carrying capacity in the event of premature adhesive failure while rivets induce compressive residual stresses in the joint. Results from FE tool ABAQUS analysis for adhesive bonded and hybrid joints agrees with the experiments. From the analysis, the energy release rate for adhesive bonded joints is higher than that of hybrid joints in both opening (mode I) and shear direction (mode II). Most joints show higher energy release rate in mode II. This indicates that the joints experience fatigue crack in the shear direction, which is responsible for crack opening.

Stress Analysis Of Wavy Lap Joint (WAVY LAP JOINT 응력 해석)

  • 김위대;양승희
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society For Composite Materials Conference
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    • 2000.11a
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    • pp.216-219
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    • 2000
  • The adhesive bonded single-lap joint is due to its intrinsic load eccentricity problem, severe peel stresses concentration occur at both end of the joint. In this paper, new lap-joint is designed to avoid the singular peel stress, and to compare the stresses of the middle adhesive layer between the single-lap joint and the wavy-lap joint. Two adherend lay-up, i.e., [90/0/90/0]$_{2s}$ and [0/90/0/90]$_{2s}$ were consider in the study.

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Failure Mode and Strength of Unidirectional Composite Single Lap Bonded Joints II. Failure Prediction (일방향 복합재료 Single Lap 접합 조인트의 파손 모드 및 파손 강도 II. 파손 예측)

  • Yi Young-Moo;Kim Chun-Gon;Kim Kwang-Soo
    • Composites Research
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    • v.18 no.1
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    • pp.1-9
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    • 2005
  • A methodology is presented for the failure prediction of composite single-lap bonded joints considering both of composite adherend failure and bondline failure. An elastic-perfectly plastic model of adhesive and a delamination failure criterion are used in the methodology. The failure predictions have been performed using finite element method and the proposed methodology. The failure prediction results such as failure mode and strength have very good agreements with the test results of joint specimens with various bonding methods and parameters. The influence of variations in the effective strength (that is, adhesion performance) and plastic behavior of adhesive on the failure characteristics of composite bonded Joints are investigated numerically. The numerical results show that optimal joint strength is archived when adhesive and delamination failure occur in the same time.

A stress-function variational approach toward CFRP -concrete interfacial stresses in bonded joints

  • Samadvand, Hojjat;Dehestani, Mehdi
    • Advances in concrete construction
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    • v.9 no.1
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    • pp.43-54
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    • 2020
  • This paper presents an innovative stress-function variational approach in formulating the interfacial shear and normal stresses in an externally bonded concrete joint using carbon fiber-reinforced plastic (CFRP) plies. The joint is subjected to surface traction loadings applied at both ends of the concrete substrate layer. By introducing two interfacial shear and normal stress functions on the CFRP-concrete interface, based on Euler-Bernoulli beam idea and static stress equations of equilibrium, the entire stress fields of the joint were determined. The complementary strain energy was minimized in order to solve the governing equation of the joint. This yields an ordinary differential equation from which the interfacial normal and shear stresses were proposed explicitly, satisfying all the multiple traction boundary conditions. Lamination theory for composite materials was also employed to obtain the interfacial stresses. The proposed approach was validated by the analytic models in the literature as well as through a comprehensive computational code generated by the authors. Furthermore, a numerical verification was carried out via the finite element software ABAQUS. In the end, a scaling analysis was conducted to analyze the interfacial stress field dependence of the joint upon effective issues using the devised code.

Theoretical and experimental modal responses of adhesive bonded T-joints

  • Kunche, Mani Chandra;Mishra, Pradeep K.;Nallala, Hari Babu;Hirwani, Chetan K.;Katariya, Pankaj V.;Panda, Subhransu;Panda, Subrata K.
    • Wind and Structures
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    • v.29 no.5
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    • pp.361-369
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    • 2019
  • The modal frequency responses of adhesive bonded T-joint structure have been analyzed numerically and verified with own experimental data. For this purpose, the damped free frequencies of the bonded joint have been computed using a three-dimensional finite element model via ANSYS parametric design language (APDL) code. The practical relevance of the joint structure analysis has been established by comparing the simulation data with the in-house experimental values. Additionally, the influences of various geometrical and material parameters on the damped free frequency responses of the joint structure have been investigated and final inferences discussed in details. It is observed that the natural frequency values increase for the higher aspect ratios of the joint structure. Also, the joint made up of Glass fiber/epoxy with quasi-isotropic fiber orientation indicates more resistance towards free vibration.

End-Shape Effect for Stress Concentration Reduction of Composite Single-Lap Bonded Joint (끝단형상에 따른 복합소재 단일겹치기 체결부의 응력집중 저감에 관한 연구)

  • Kim, Jung-Seok;Hwang, Jae-Yeon
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers A
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    • v.35 no.3
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    • pp.333-340
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    • 2011
  • We evaluated the stress-reduction effect for different shapes of a composite adherend with or without a spew fillet. Six different single-lap joint specimens were modeled and assessed using nonlinear finite element analysis. Moreover, we investigated the effect of the stiffness ratio of the adherend and adhesive. The single-lap joint with normal tapering had the highest stress values, and the single-lap joint with reverse tapering and a spew fillet had the lowest stress values. The composite adherends with higher stiffness had lower stress values, and the adhesives with lower stiffness had lower stress values.