Characterization and modeling of tensile behavior of ceramic woven fabric compositesThis paper examines the tensile behavior of SiC/SiC fabric composites. In the characterization effort, the stress-strain relation and damage evolution are studied with a series of loading and unloading tensile test experiments. The stress-strain relation is linear in response to the initial loading and becomes nonlinear when loading exceeds the proportional limit. Transverse cracking has been observed to be a dominant damage mode governing the nonlinear deformation. The damage is initiated at the inter-tow pores where fiber yarns cross over each other. In the modeling work, the analysis is based upon a fiber bundle model, in which fiber undulation in the warp and fill directions and gaps among fiber yarns have been taken into account. Two limiting cases of fabric stacking arrangements are studied. Closed form solutions are obtained for the composite stiffness and Poisson's ratio. Transverse cracking in the composite is discussed by applying a constant failure strain criterion.
Document ID
19920032938
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Kuo, Wen-Shyong (Delaware Univ. Newark, DE, United States)
Chen, Wennei Y. (Delaware Univ. Newark, DE, United States)
Parvizi-Majidi, Azar (Delaware Univ. Newark, DE, United States)
Chou, Tsu-Wei (Delaware, University Newark, United States)