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Technical Paper

Erosion Behaviour of Stitched Composite Laminates

1994-03-01
940057
The sand-water erosion behaviour of notched holes in glass/epoxy composites was investigated. Using tnrough-the-thickness stitching, the amount of hole damage caused by impact testing prior to wear tests was varied. Erosion resistance was evaluated based on the amount of mass loss. Results showed that the holes in unstitched laminate which incurred greatest impact damage, eroded the least. The holes in stitched laminates, however, were more susceptible to erosive wear even though the internal damage appeared less severe. SEM photographs showed that the lower half of the holes in the unstitched laminates remained intact while those in the stitched laminates were eroded substantially. Cut sections away from the hole were observed with an optical microscope. A comparison of cut sections showed that heavy stitching results in severe fibre impalement damage, thereby reducing the reinforcing capability of the fibres around the hole.
Technical Paper

Delamination Suppression in Composites via Thermoplastic Interleaves

1994-03-01
940058
The paper presents the development of delamination resistant composite laminates using interleaving technology. A simple technique which incorporates discrete layers of thin thermoplastic films between wet glass/epoxy prepreg, followed by co-curing, is described. Two types of films having widely different properties were used in order to investigate the effects of film characteristics on composite interlaminar shear strength. Microscopic observations of the specimens after four-point shear testing showed that the failure mode was strongly affected by both the presence and the characteristics of the interleaves.
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