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| What
is the building block approach for structural evaluation |
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It
is generally recognised that numerical analysis is supplemental
to design of composite structures. However, it should always
be used in conjunction with a rigorous test programme. The
approach taken for compiling a test programme from materials
selection to structural validation is termed the "building-block
approach". The advantage of this approach is it allows
experimental identification of the multiplicity of failure
modes that composite structures may experience. It is also
used to identify knock down or enhancement factors for environmental
conditions when testing full-scale structures in a hostile
environment is not feasible. Other building block tests allow
guidance on the truncation of fatigue spectra and the variability
inherent with fatigue testing. The building block approach
is summarised in Mil-Hdbk-17 as:
- Generate material preliminary design
allowables.
- Based on the design/analysis of
the structure, select critical areas for subsequent test
verification.
- Determine
the most strength-critical failure mode for each design
feature.
- Select
the test environment that will produce the strength-critical
failure mode. Special attention should be given to matrix-sensitive
failure modes (such as compression, out-of-plane shear,
and bondlines) and potential "hot-spots" caused
by out-of-plane loads or stiffness tailored designs.
- Design and test a series of test specimens, each one of
which simulates a single selected failure mode and loading
condition; compare to analytical predictions, and adjust
analysis models or design allowables as necessary.
-
Design and conduct increasingly more complicated tests that
evaluate more complicated loading situations with the possibility
of failure from several potential failure modes. Compare
to analytical predictions and adjust analysis models as
necessary. Design (including compensation factors) and conduct,
as required, full-scale component static and fatigue testing
for final validation of internal loads and structural integrity.
Compare to analysis.
The
five levels of tests are constituent, lamina, laminate, structural
element, and structural subcomponent tests.
Constituent
Testing:
This
evaluates the individual properties of fibres, fibre forms,
matrix materials, and fibre-matrix pre-forms. Key properties
include fibre and matrix density, and fibre tensile strength
and tensile modulus.
Lamina
Testing:
This
evaluates the properties of the fibre and matrix together
in the composite material form. Key properties include fibre
areal weight, matrix content, void content, cured ply thickness,
lamina tensile strengths and moduli, lamina compressive
strengths and moduli, and lamina shear strengths and moduli.
Laminate
Testing:
Laminate
testing characterises the response of the composite material
in a given laminate design such as quasi isotropic. Key
properties include tensile strengths and moduli, compressive
strengths and moduli, shear strengths and moduli, interlaminar
fracture toughness, and fatigue resistance.
Structural
Element Testing:
This evaluates the ability of the material to tolerate
common laminate discontinuities. Key properties for the
aerospace industry, include open and filled hole tensile
strengths, open and filled hole compressive strengths, compression
after impact strength, and joint bearing and bearing bypass
strengths.
Structural
Subcomponent or Full-scale Testing:
This testing evaluates the behavior and failure mode
of increasingly more complex structural assemblies which
are structure and application dependent.
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