Journal of Materials Research and Technology (Sep 2023)
Damage formation and evolution mechanisms in drilling CFRP with prefabricated delamination defects: Simulation and experimentation
Abstract
Delamination is a common defect in carbon fiber reinforced polymer (CFRP) during the molding process. Accurately understanding the formation and evolution mechanisms of drilling damage in CFRP with delamination defects is helpful for effectively suppressing drilling defects with delamination. In this study, a macro-micro finite element model (FEM) of CFRP with prefabricated delamination defects during drilling is established to simulate and analyze the damage formation and evolution behavior. The circular polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) films are employed to simulate the delamination defects in CFRP. These samples with different sizes of prefabricated delamination defects are prepared for the drilling experiments. The results show that the maximum errors of the thrust force and the exit damage factor between the simulation and experiments are 8.75% and 4.2% respectively, indicating good reliability of the simulation model. Under the condition of CFRP with delamination defects, as the size of the delamination defects increases, the maximum thrust force decreases, while the maximum delamination propagation length and exit damage increase. Compared to the case without delamination defects, when the delamination diameter is 7 mm, the delamination propagation percentage and the maximum stress in CFRP increase by 52.17% and 155.4% respectively, and the maximum increment of the exit delamination damage factor is 38%.