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| How
do I evaluate durability, damage resistance &
tolerance? |
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The
durability and damage tolerance of a composite material structure
relate to the structures ability to resist the onset of damage
and perform to required parameters with damage present throughout
its remaining life time. Composite structures are exposed
to a number of events during their lifetime. These can include
in-service loading, environment and mishaps that can cause
damage initiation and structure degradation. In addition,
some form of damage may be present through manufacture or
handling before the structure ever enters service. The location
of damage initiation sites may be difficult to identify and
thorough inspections are required.
The
generally good fatigue and corrosion resistance of composites
aid in durability and damage tolerance design. However, it
is the inherent nature of composites that also presents significant
challenges to the designer to prevent matrix related damage
initiation and growth. Most composite material resins are
brittle and hence have limited resistance to damage. This
damage manifests itself as matrix cracks and delaminations.
These matrix failures can occur as a result of an impact event,
some form of environmental degradation, or out-of-plane fatigue
loads.
The
ability of a composite material to resist certain potential
damage inducing events is termed damage resistance. It differs
from durability in that durability addresses the prevention
of damage under normal operating conditions.
Material
or structural design must incorporate a consideration of damage
resistance, durability and damage tolerance as they are interrelated.
Improving one of these aspects, may not necessarily improve
the others. An important part of a structural development
program is to determine the damage that the structure is capable
of carrying at the various required load levels. A damage
tolerance design approach involves the use of inspection techniques
along with structural design concepts to protect safety. An
extensive residual strength database addressing the full range
of potential damage events (including, impact damage, holes,
manufacturing flaws) is required to ascertain allowable damage
limits. This procedure will allow the critical damage threshold
to be identified that will allow quantitative inspection procedures
and periods to be set.
One
of the limiting factors to the use of laminated composites
is their internal damage state, particularly after an impact
event. Impact events may occur from many sources including
tool drop and collision with vehicles. The internal damage
is a complex pattern of cracks, delaminations and fibre failure.
These patterns are heavily dependent on the nature of the
impact event.
From
Mil-Hdbk-17 the method to evaluate damage tolerance requires
the following steps:
- Derive the entire residual static strength versus impact
energy curve from analysis supported by test.
- Determine accidental impact threats in terms of energy
versus probability curves.
- Calculate, within each scheduled inspection interval,
the probability to have such accidental damages on the structure.
- Determine load (or stress, or strain) occurrences versus
probability curves.
- Check that the scheduled inspection program will make
damage detection highly probable before the probability
target is exceeded.
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