Composite Materials: Course Content
Composite Materials: Course Content
Materials
Course content
Navigation material world
Content
Introduction
Raw materials
Material Selection Guide
Composite Manufacturing Techniques
Mechanical Behaviour of Composites and test methods
Micromechanical models of composite behaviour
Failure analysis and mechanism
The long term behaviour of composite materials
Emerging Composites (nanocomposites,biocomposites,
Introduction
Conventional engineering materials
What are the composites?
Classification of composites materials
Functions of fibres and matrices
Special features of composites
Composite processing
Composite Markets
Bariers in composite markets
Questions
Conventional engineering materials
Metals
Plastics
Ceramics
Composites
Engineering Materials
Metals: conductors of electricity and heat, quite strong but yet deformable (ductile)
Ceramics: compounds between metallic and non-metallic elements, insulators (electricity and heat),
temperature resistant, hard but very brittle
Polymers: compounds of non-metallic elements, large molecule structures, low density, extremely
flexible (very ductile)
Composites: consist of more than one type of material. Composite materials aim to combine the best
characteristics of each of the component materials. Composites are a combination of properties
Fatigue means:
-The reduction of strength due to the repetitious loading/ unloading
- Fatigue does not always lead to failure
- Failure can occur if the stress surpasses the endurance limit of the material
Why do we have to know the material
properties in the desing process
Properties of Engineering Materials
Strong materials
How strong (and stiff) can materials be ?
Why are they not that strong ? ( actually they are very weak )
What type of defects exist ? (one perfect state exists, but many defect
states exist)
Can defects be eliminated or controlled ?
What is the best strategy for strong materials ?
Strong material
Strong materials
Fibres are stronger along their lengths than the same
material in bulk form.
the constituent materials are different at the molecular level and are mechanically
separable (fibre reinforced composites).
bulk form, the constituent materials work together but remain in their original forms.
To binds the fibers together and transfers the load to the fibers.
It provides rigidity and shape to the structure.
To isolates the fibers so that individual fibers can act separately.
This stops or slows the propagation of a crack.
To provides a good surface finish quality and aids in the
production of net-shape or near-net-shape parts.
To provides protection to reinforcing fibers against chemical
attack and mechanical damage (wear).
The performance characteristics such as ductility, impact
strength, etc. are also influenced.
The failure mode is strongly affected by its compatibility with
fibres
Classification of Composites
Fibrous composites
Fibres in various forms are inherently much stiffer and stronger than the same material in bulk form
Laminated composites
consist of layers of at least two different materials that are bonded together
Laminated glass, Bimetals and cladmetals, Plastic-based laminates, Laminated fibrous composites
Particulate composites
of particles of one or more materials suspended in a matrix of another material
Non-metallic/non-metallic (cement and sand), Metallic/non-metallic( Al powder and PU), Metallic/metallic,
Polymeric/inorganic
Classification of Composites
1. Metal Matrix Composites (MMCs) - mixtures of ceramics and metals,
such as cemented carbides and other cermets
2. Ceramic Matrix Composites (CMCs) - Al2O3 and SiC imbedded with
fibers to improve properties, especially in high temperature
applications
The least common composite matrix
3. Polymer Matrix Composites (PMCs) - thermosetting resins are widely
used in PMCs
Examples: epoxy and polyester with fiber reinforcement, and phenolic with
powders
Classification of Composites
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Classification: Fiber-Reinforced (ii)
39
Fiber Alignment
Adapted from Fig. 16.8,
Callister & Rethwisch 8e.
(a) fracture
surface
42
Classification: Structural
Particle-reinforced Fiber-reinforced Structural
Laminates -
-- stacked and bonded fiber-reinforced sheets
- stacking sequence: e.g., 0/90
Adapted from
- benefit: balanced in-plane stiffness Fig. 16.16,
Callister &
Rethwisch 8e.
Sandwich panels
-- honeycomb core between two facing sheets
- benefits: low density, large bending stiffness
face sheet
adhesive layer
honeycomb
resistance w/SiC
whiskers
10 -10
s(MPa)
20 30 50 100 200 44
Summary
Composites types are designated by:
-- the matrix material (CMC, MMC, PMC)
-- the reinforcement (particles, fibers, structural)
Composite property benefits:
-- MMC: enhanced E, s, creep performance
-- CMC: enhanced KIc
-- PMC: enhanced E/r, sy, TS/r
Particulate-reinforced:
-- Types: large-particle and dispersion-strengthened
-- Properties are isotropic
Fiber-reinforced:
-- Types: continuous (aligned)
discontinuous (aligned or random)
-- Properties can be isotropic or anisotropic
Structural:
-- Laminates and sandwich panels
45
Features of Composites
Capabilities for part integration.
In-service monitoring or online process monitoring with the help of embedded sensors
A high specific stiffness (equal stiffness of steel at one fifth the weight and one half weight of
aluminium.
The specific strength is very high (3-5 times higher than stell and aluminium alloys).
The fatigue strength is much higher for composite materials.
high corrosion and chemical resistance
the coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) can be made zero
Production of complex parts and reducing production times.
Good impact properties ( great thoughness)
Noise, vibration, and harshness characteristics are better for composite materials than metals.
Design freedom to meet performance of specifications with changing fibre resin types,
orientation length or processing
Cost of tooling is lower than metals due to pressure and temperature requirements.
Drawbacks of Composites
The materials cost for composite materials is very high compared to that of
steel and aluminum. It is almost 5 to 20 times more than aluminum and
steel on a weight basis.
In the past, composite materials have been used for the fabrication of large
structures at low volme relatively slow
The temperature resistance of composite parts depends on the
temperature resistance of the matrix materials.
Composites absorb moisture, which affects the properties and dimensional
stability of the composites. (Average composites work in the temperature range 40 to +100C and upper
temperature range 150-200 C).