Phd Degree / Doktora
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/2869
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Doctoral Thesis Experimental and Numerical Investigation of the Impact Resistance and Impact Damage Tolerance of a Carbon Fiber Reinforced Thermoplastic Polyphenylene Sulfide (pps) Matrix Composite(01. Izmir Institute of Technology, 2024) Seven, Semih Berk; Güden, Mustafa; Taşdemirci, AlperThe impact resistance and impact damage tolerance of an aerospace grade high performance 5 Harness Satin woven fabric carbon fiber reinforced/polyphenylene sulfide matrix (CF/PPS) thermoplastic composite were investigated experimentally and numerically. The numerical modeling was performed using the experimentally determined parameters of material model MAT-58 and Hashin failure criteria in LS-DYNA using the single shell and stacked shell models. The numerical models of the low velocity impact (LVI) tests showed good correlations with the experimental tests while the stacked shell model showed nearer results with the experimental tests. The stacked shell model also estimated the LVI test delamination areas, which were comparable with the experimental damage areas. The LVI tested coupons were further subjected to the compression after impact (CAI) tests in order to determine the damage tolerance of CF/PPS composite. The CAI tests were modeled using the single shell model. The numerical models of the CAI tests showed very similar trends with the experimental CAI tests. The trends were shown to be more converging in the specimens tested at 3 m/s and above in the LVI tests. Lastly, three high velocity impact (HVI) tests were performed at around 100 m/s. The failure mode of the HVI tests was shown to be very different from that of the LVI tests. The long longitudinal and transverse cracks were formed in the HVI tests. The delamination damage in the HVI tests determined using the stacked shell model was found to be more comparable with the experimental delamination damage determined by the C-Scan.Doctoral Thesis Advanced Material Characterization and Modeling the Foreign Body Impact Damage Initiation and Progression of a Laminated Carbon Composite(01. Izmir Institute of Technology, 2023) Bayhan, Mesut; Taşdemirci, Alper; Güden, MustafaThe coupon level composite sample tests and the accompanying numerical models were carried out to predict the response of woven carbon fiber composite structures against impact. The numerical models of the coupon-level tests were implemented in LSDYNA software using the MAT_162 and MAT_58 composite material models. The results obtained by both quasi-static and dynamic tests were used to determine their constants. In addition to the tests that were used for the determination and calibration of the material model parameters, separate tests and their models were performed for the validation, including punch shear tests and low-velocity impact tests. It could be said that the material models examined were considered comprehensive and precise as the experimental results were well predicted by the numerical models. Also, the rate sensitivity of the woven carbon composite in the in-plane and thickness directions was investigated experimentally and numerically. In the tests, the DIC method was employed in the determination of the displacement and strain of the specimen. Based on the results obtained, it was concluded that the in-plane tensile properties are rate insensitive. Besides, the simulations of the component level tests, such as bird strike and drone impact, were established to investigate the damage initiation and propagation within the composite. It was found that the drone impact results in more severe damage compared to the bird impact. It is worth noting that the development of such precise composite material models to simulate dynamic loadings will definitely shorten the time between the beginning of designing and the component testing.Doctoral Thesis The Development of Constitutive Equations of Polycarbonate and Modeling the Impact Behavior(01. Izmir Institute of Technology, 2023) Sarıkaya, Mustafa Kemal; Güden, Mustafa; Taşdemirci, AlperThe Johnson and Cook (JC) flow stress and damage parameters of a polycarbonate were determined by the mechanical tests and numerical simulations. The experimental tests included quasi-static and high strain rate tension and compression, quasi-static notched-specimen tension, quasi-static indentation (QSI), low velocity impact (LVI) and projectile impact (PI). The flow stress equation determined from the experimental average true stress-true strain curve well agreed with the effective stress-strain obtained from the quasi-static numerical tension test. The numerical QSI force-displacement curve based on the experimental average true stress-true strain equation was further shown to be very similar to that of the experiment. The LVI and PI test simulations were then continued with the experimental average true stress-true strain equation using five different flow stress-strain rate relations: JC, Huh and Kang, Allen-Rule and Jones, Cowper-Symonds and the nonlinear rate approach. No strain rate sensitivity in the LVI tests was ascribed to low strain rate dependency of the flow stress at intermediate strain rates and large strains. On the other side, all the stress-strain rate relations investigated nearly predicted the experimental damage types in the PI tests, except the Cowper-Symonds relation which predicted the fracture of the polycarbonate plate at 140 m s-1. The absorbed energy at 160 m s-1 test was determined 1.6 times that of the QSI test, proving an increased energy absorption of the tested polycarbonate at the investigated impact velocities. The verified parameters were finally used to model the damages formed on a canopy against bird strike.
