TY - JOUR
T1 - Experimental and numerical investigation of damage in multilayer sandwich panels with square and trapezoidal corrugated cores under quasi-static three-point bending
AU - Vahidimanesh, Benyamin
AU - Farrokhabadi, Amin
AU - Shahvari, Reyhaneh
AU - Gazor, Mohammad Sajad
AU - Mahdiabadi, Morteza Karamooz
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2024/11/1
Y1 - 2024/11/1
N2 - Multilayer composite sandwich panels with corrugated cores have the potential for structural applications requiring high stiffness and strength-to-weight ratios. This study aims to experimentally and numerically investigate the bending response of sandwich panels with novel square and trapezoidal corrugated core configurations fabricated from E-glass fiber-reinforced epoxy composites, both with and without polyurethane foam filling. Quasi-static three-point bending tests were conducted to evaluate and compare the flexural stiffness and maximum load capacity of the panel designs. The cores were manufactured using vacuum-assisted resin transfer molding. Key results showed that changing the core geometry from square to trapezoidal improved the bending stiffness by up to 26%. Incorporating polyurethane foam further increased the bending stiffness by up to 41% and maximum load by up to 47% compared to solid cores. Failure initiation and progression were governed by matrix cracking in the face sheets and cores, followed by core cell wall buckling and delamination. Finite element modeling using ABAQUS captured the progressive damage behavior, exhibiting good agreement with experimental force-displacement responses. Failure modes included matrix cracks, fiber fractures, core buckling and delamination. This study provides valuable insights into the mechanical performance of innovative corrugated core sandwich panel designs under quasi-static bending loads. The validated FE approach also enables virtual testing and optimization of composite sandwich structures.
AB - Multilayer composite sandwich panels with corrugated cores have the potential for structural applications requiring high stiffness and strength-to-weight ratios. This study aims to experimentally and numerically investigate the bending response of sandwich panels with novel square and trapezoidal corrugated core configurations fabricated from E-glass fiber-reinforced epoxy composites, both with and without polyurethane foam filling. Quasi-static three-point bending tests were conducted to evaluate and compare the flexural stiffness and maximum load capacity of the panel designs. The cores were manufactured using vacuum-assisted resin transfer molding. Key results showed that changing the core geometry from square to trapezoidal improved the bending stiffness by up to 26%. Incorporating polyurethane foam further increased the bending stiffness by up to 41% and maximum load by up to 47% compared to solid cores. Failure initiation and progression were governed by matrix cracking in the face sheets and cores, followed by core cell wall buckling and delamination. Finite element modeling using ABAQUS captured the progressive damage behavior, exhibiting good agreement with experimental force-displacement responses. Failure modes included matrix cracks, fiber fractures, core buckling and delamination. This study provides valuable insights into the mechanical performance of innovative corrugated core sandwich panel designs under quasi-static bending loads. The validated FE approach also enables virtual testing and optimization of composite sandwich structures.
KW - Composite sandwich panel
KW - Damage mechanism
KW - Experimental test
KW - Numerical
KW - Three-point bending
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85200114738&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.engstruct.2024.118715
DO - 10.1016/j.engstruct.2024.118715
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85200114738
SN - 0141-0296
VL - 318
JO - Engineering Structures
JF - Engineering Structures
M1 - 118715
ER -