January 1, 2003
Conference Paper

Prediction of Damage in A Randomly Oriented Short-Fiber Composite Plate Containing A Central Hole

Abstract

A micro-macro approach to matrix cracking in randomly oriented short-fiber composites is used in this paper for the damage and failure analysis of a random glass/epoxy plate containing a central hole under tensile loading. At the micro-scale, the virgin and reduced elastic properties of the composite are computed using micromechanical models and are then averaged over all possible orientations and weighted by an orientation distribution function. Next, the macroscopic response is performed by means of a continuum damage mechanics formulation in which the damage evolution law is obtained using a damage threshold function and the concepts of thermodynamic of continuous media. Damage accumulations leading to initiation and propagation of a macroscopic crack are modeled using a vanishing element technique.

Revised: April 13, 2004 | Published: January 1, 2003

Citation

Nguyen B.N., and M.A. Khaleel. 2003. Prediction of Damage in A Randomly Oriented Short-Fiber Composite Plate Containing A Central Hole. In Second M.I.T. Conference on Computational Fluid and Solid Mechanics (M.I.T., June 17-20, 2003), edited by Bathe, K.-J., 1, 519-522. Oxford:Elsevier Science. PNNL-SA-37197.