About this Abstract |
Meeting |
2024 ASC Technical Conference, US-Japan Joint Symposium, D30 Meeting
|
Symposium
|
2024 ASC Technical Conference, US-Japan Joint Symposium, D30 Meeting
|
Presentation Title |
Analysis of Crack Propagation Transients in Accelerated Fatigue Characterization of Adhesives |
Author(s) |
Carlos G. Davila, Cheryl A Rose |
On-Site Speaker (Planned) |
Carlos G. Davila |
Abstract Scope |
The characterization of the rates of crack propagation by means of a Paris law is intended for steady-state fatigue conditions. While rates of crack propagation are primarily driven by J<sup>max</sup>, in the presence of evolving process zones and fiber bridging they also depend on the crack propagation length: cracks with fully formed process zones propagate more slowly. Analyses of the rates of crack propagation in laminates secondarily bonded with AF163-2K film adhesive were conducted to identify the rate transients that occur during the formation of the process zone in the adhesive and during the evolution of bridging of the adhesive’s carrier knit across the crack faces. Dávila's CF22 cohesive fatigue damage model was used in finite element analyses of the double cantilever beam test to explain discrepancies in experimental rates of propagation obtained from tests conducted with either increasing or decreasing J<sup>max</sup>. The results indicate that the analyses accurately reproduce transient and steady-state rates of propagation observed in the experimental results, as well as the threshold of propagation. Transient rates of propagation always exceed those in steady state, which underscores the need to understand transients and account for them in fatigue characterization. The results also highlight that a Paris curve for steady-state propagation can be obtained most quickly using a decreasing load function, but that this curve consists of an unconservative bound to the rates of propagation. A lateral shift in the Paris curve is proposed for a conservative characterization that removes the effect of bridging and other R-curve effects. |
Proceedings Inclusion? |
Definite: Post-meeting proceedings |