Influence of fiber alignment on pseudoductility and microcracking in a cementitious carbon fiber composite material
Author(s): |
Matthias Rutzen
Philipp Lauff Roland Niedermeier Oliver Fischer Manuel Raith Christian U. Grosse Ursula Weiss Malte A. Peter Dirk Volkmer |
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Medium: | journal article |
Language(s): | English |
Published in: | Materials and Structures, 23 February 2021, n. 2, v. 54 |
DOI: | 10.1617/s11527-021-01649-2 |
Abstract: |
This research examines the effect of fiber alignment on the performance of an exceptionally tough 3D-printable short carbon fiber reinforced cementitious composite material, the flexural strength of which can exceed 100 N/mm². The material shows pseudoductility caused by strain-hardening and microcracking. An extrusion-based manufacturing process allows accurate control over the spatial alignment of the fibers’ orientation, since extrusion through a tight nozzle leads to nearly unidirectional alignment of the fibers with respect to the directional movement of the nozzle. Specimens were investigated using mechanical tests (flexural and tensile load), augmented by non-destructive methods such as X-ray 3D computed tomography and acoustic emission analysis to gain insight into the microstructure. Additionally, digital image correlation is used to visualize the microcracking process. X-ray CT confirms that about 70% of fibers show less than 10° deviation from the extrusion direction. Systematic variations of the fiber alignment with respect to the direction of tensile load show that carbon fibers enhance the flexural strength of the test specimens as long as their alignment angle does not deviate by more than 20° from the direction of the acting tensile stress. Acoustic emission analysis is capable of evaluating the spatiotemporal degradation behavior during loading and shows consistent results with the microstructural damage observed in CT scans. The strong connection of fiber alignment and flexural strength ties into a change from ductile to brittle failure caused by degradation on a microstructural level, as seen by complementary results acquired from the aforementioned methods of investigation. |
Copyright: | © The Author(s) 2021 |
License: | This creative work has been published under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC-BY 4.0) license which allows copying, and redistribution as well as adaptation of the original work provided appropriate credit is given to the original author and the conditions of the license are met. |
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10589656 - Published on:
08/03/2021 - Last updated on:
02/06/2021