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Scaling effects of defects in fiber-reinforced compositesMaterial defects may be introduced willingly or unwillingly during material manufacturing and structural component fabrication stages. Their presence in the material plays a dominant role in determining the material's strength and the associate failure mechanisms. In the sense that the size and the number of defects may increase with the volume of the material, the effect of dimensional scaling may manifest itself in the dependence of material strength on volume. Or, alternatively, there may exist a scaling effect of material defects. In fiber-reinforced composites, manufacturing or fabrication defects may come in several forms: matrix voids, matrix microcracks, fiber misalignment, broken fibers, or interface disbonds, just to mention a few. These are interacting and competing defects in the sense that one type of defect may become dominant under one stress condition and another type of defect may become dominant under a different stress condition. This happens because the fiber reinforcement network, together with the distribution of defects, constitutes the prime microstructure of the composite, and there exist continued interactions between the evolving microstructure and the distribution of defects. In the process, the scaling effects of defects are complicated by this interaction. In this presentation, the scaling effects of defects in fiber-reinforced composites will be briefly discussed with the introduction of the concept of effective defects. It is then shown with the aid of some actual experimental and analysis results that the scaling effects are very much present, but they are regulated by the characteristic dimension of the composite microstructure due to the aforementioned microstructure-defect interaction effect.
Document ID
19940033296
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Wang, A. S. D.
(Drexel Univ. Philadelphia, PA, United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
July 1, 1994
Publication Information
Publication: NASA. Langley Research Center, Workshop on Scaling Effects in Composite Materials and Structures
Subject Category
Structural Mechanics
Accession Number
94N37807
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.

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