Abstract:
Composite industry is currently entering into a mature phase; however, the lack of reliable
composites property database poses a big challenge to designers as their properties cannot be
directly taken from material handbooks. In Pakistan, Composite Industry is nurturing in the
field of sports goods, daily consumer items and structural engineering applications where
high grade composites are currently being utilized. All these industries will be benefited if
material properties for design of products are readily available.
Currently, the property prediction process of composites is done either by using the
experimental methods or by employing various numerical and analytical approaches.
Analytical approaches are not yet fully developed for complicated architectures whereas
experimental methods involve expensive equipment. Numerical methods like FEM can
however, capture the effects of complicated architectures and thus can provide the best
estimates for effective properties of the composites.
Keeping above in view, this study aims to develop a micromechanical finite element (FE)
model to approximate the effective orthotropic properties of 8-harness satin weave glass fiber
reinforced phenolic (GFRP) composites. For the geometric model, measurements taken from
X-Ray Microtomography images are used in TEXGEN 3.5.2 to generate the Representative
Volume Element (RVE) of the composite under study. After providing constituent properties
and applying Periodic Boundary Conditions, the RVE is imported in ABAQUS 6.10.1 to
carry out the simulation using the implicit solver. Material properties extracted from the FE
simulation are then compared with the available experimental database for the material under
investigation. After validation, the FE model is further utilized to predict the unknown
effective properties of the same composite that are usually difficult to be determined
experimentally.
Numerically approximated macroscopic properties showed good agreement with the
available experimental data. Thus, it can be fairly concluded that the same methodology may
be adopted to develop FE micromechanical models for 2D as well 3D composites with
appropriate alterations in their respective geometric models. This practice may help in
determining the material characteristics of composites with various geometries which will
surely facilitate the design processes related to the fields of aerospace, automotive,
infrastructure, armor, renewable energy and bio-engineering.