Strain rate effects in the indentation behavior of foam-based sandwich structures

Indentation tests have been undertaken at quasi-static and impact rates of strain on sandwich structures based on six different types of polymer foam core and two types of composite skin. Initially, the influence of strain rate on the compression properties of the sandwich structures has been invest...

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Main Authors: Hassan, Mohamad Zaki, Cantwell, W. J.
Format: Article
Published: SAGE Publications 2012
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/33549/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0021998311414943
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spelling my.utm.335492018-11-30T06:37:34Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/33549/ Strain rate effects in the indentation behavior of foam-based sandwich structures Hassan, Mohamad Zaki Cantwell, W. J. Q Science (General) Indentation tests have been undertaken at quasi-static and impact rates of strain on sandwich structures based on six different types of polymer foam core and two types of composite skin. Initially, the influence of strain rate on the compression properties of the sandwich structures has been investigated, where it has been shown that the plastic collapse strength of the foam cores is rate sensitive, increasing by approximately 100% over the range of strain rates considered. The indentation behavior of the sandwich structures was characterized using a Meyer indentation law of the form P = Can, where P is the applied force, a is the resulting indentation, and C, the contact stiffness and n, the indentation exponent, are constants for a given system. It has been shown that the value of the exponent, n, does not vary significantly with the properties of the core or the skin, typically being close to unity for all tests. The contact stiffness C varied greatly and was found to depend on the plastic collapse strength of the foam and the properties of the skin. It has been shown that a plot of C vs. plastic collapse strength containing all of the quasi-static and dynamic data appears to yield a unique relationship for the systems considered here. Tests have also shown that C varies with indentor radius, with the greatest sensitivity to indentor radius being observed in the higher modulus foams.These results highlight the importance of using the appropriate dynamic contact properties when modeling the impact response of foam-based sandwich structures. SAGE Publications 2012-05 Article PeerReviewed Hassan, Mohamad Zaki and Cantwell, W. J. (2012) Strain rate effects in the indentation behavior of foam-based sandwich structures. Journal of Composite Materials, 46 (10). pp. 1191-1199. ISSN 0021-9983 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0021998311414943 DOI:10.1177/0021998311414943
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
topic Q Science (General)
spellingShingle Q Science (General)
Hassan, Mohamad Zaki
Cantwell, W. J.
Strain rate effects in the indentation behavior of foam-based sandwich structures
description Indentation tests have been undertaken at quasi-static and impact rates of strain on sandwich structures based on six different types of polymer foam core and two types of composite skin. Initially, the influence of strain rate on the compression properties of the sandwich structures has been investigated, where it has been shown that the plastic collapse strength of the foam cores is rate sensitive, increasing by approximately 100% over the range of strain rates considered. The indentation behavior of the sandwich structures was characterized using a Meyer indentation law of the form P = Can, where P is the applied force, a is the resulting indentation, and C, the contact stiffness and n, the indentation exponent, are constants for a given system. It has been shown that the value of the exponent, n, does not vary significantly with the properties of the core or the skin, typically being close to unity for all tests. The contact stiffness C varied greatly and was found to depend on the plastic collapse strength of the foam and the properties of the skin. It has been shown that a plot of C vs. plastic collapse strength containing all of the quasi-static and dynamic data appears to yield a unique relationship for the systems considered here. Tests have also shown that C varies with indentor radius, with the greatest sensitivity to indentor radius being observed in the higher modulus foams.These results highlight the importance of using the appropriate dynamic contact properties when modeling the impact response of foam-based sandwich structures.
format Article
author Hassan, Mohamad Zaki
Cantwell, W. J.
author_facet Hassan, Mohamad Zaki
Cantwell, W. J.
author_sort Hassan, Mohamad Zaki
title Strain rate effects in the indentation behavior of foam-based sandwich structures
title_short Strain rate effects in the indentation behavior of foam-based sandwich structures
title_full Strain rate effects in the indentation behavior of foam-based sandwich structures
title_fullStr Strain rate effects in the indentation behavior of foam-based sandwich structures
title_full_unstemmed Strain rate effects in the indentation behavior of foam-based sandwich structures
title_sort strain rate effects in the indentation behavior of foam-based sandwich structures
publisher SAGE Publications
publishDate 2012
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/33549/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0021998311414943
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