Influence of waviness and curliness of fibres on mechanical properties of composites
AY Matveeva and SV Pyrlin and MMD Ramos and HJ Bohm and FWJ van Hattum, COMPUTATIONAL MATERIALS SCIENCE, 87, 1-11 (2014).
DOI: 10.1016/j.commatsci.2014.01.061
Polymeric composite materials reinforced by curved cylindrical inclusions of very high aspect ratio are studied for their elastic stiffness. The waviness and curliness of the fibres are described by sinusoidal and helical models with different amplitudes and spiral radii, respectively. Effects are investigated in detail by finite element-based homogenisation methods, analytical models and molecular dynamics simulations. Within the finite element models two types of discretisation are considered for the fibres, using continuum solid and beam elements, respectively. Periodic boundary conditions or a special set of mixed boundary conditions are applied for approximating the effective elastic properties. The analytical investigations use a mean- field approximation in which inhomogeneities are split into unconnected segments of appropriate orientation, the elasticity tensor being calculated with a Mori-Tanaka method. It is shown that both curved fibre geometries, sinusoidal and helical, significantly reduce the longitudinal elastic stiffness of the composite. Beam element-based fibre models and analytical solutions give low and high estimates, respectively, for the elastic constants. The continuum mechanical results are found to be in good agreement with the molecular dynamics predictions. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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