Next generation of high-performance impact resistant composites with visibility of damage

Lead Research Organisation: University of Glasgow
Department Name: School of Engineering

Abstract

Composites are truly the materials of the future, due to their excellent properties such as high strength to weight ratio, and their use is rising exponentially, continuing to replace or augment traditional materials in different sectors such as aerospace, automotive, wind turbine blades, civil engineering infrastructure and sporting goods. A good example is the construction of large aircraft such as the Airbus A350 and Boeing 787 which are 53% and 50% composite by weight, respectively. However, while the fibre dominant properties guarantee excellent in-plane load-bearing characteristics, traditional composite materials exhibit weak resistance to out-of-plane loads, making them susceptible to barely visible impact damage (BVID) under impact loads that can happen during manufacturing or in service. BVID can drastically reduce the strength, without any visible warning. Structures that look fine can fail suddenly at loads much lower than expected. This weak impact resistance together with the complexity of the failure mechanisms typical of composite systems led in the past decade to complex and expensive maintenance/inspection procedures. Therefore, a significantly greater safety margin than other materials leads to conservative design in composite structures. Based on these premises, the need is clear for a comprehensive solution that matches the requirements of lightweight structures with the need for high impact resistance and ease of inspection. This project is aimed at the design and development of next generation of high-performance impact resistant composites with visibility of damage and improved compression after impact strength. These exceptional properties are caused with ability to visualise and control failure modes to happen in an optimised way. Energy would be absorbed by gradual and sacrificial damage, strength would be maintained, and there would be visible evidence of damage. This would eliminate the need for very low design strains to cater for BVID, providing a step change in composite performance, leading to greater reliability and safety, together with reduced design and maintenance requirements, and longer service life. This is an exciting opportunity to develop this novel proposed technology with my extensive industrial partners, a potentially transformative prospect for the UK composites research and industry.

Publications

10 25 50

publication icon
Boaretto J (2021) Biomimetics and Composite Materials toward Efficient Mobility: A Review in Journal of Composites Science

publication icon
Tabatabaeian A (2022) A review on self-reporting mechanochromic composites: An emerging technology for structural health monitoring in Composites Part A: Applied Science and Manufacturing

 
Description This project developed novel structural health monitoring (SHM) sensors to improve the detection of low energy impact damage in laminated composites. The sensors were designed and experimentally tested and the results indicate that the sensors functioned satisfactorily and provided direct correlations between visible and internal hidden damage detected by C-scan. The sensor needs to be optimized by selecting appropriate material properties and adjusting it to the in-plane dimensions of the substrate, which provide further challenges in modelling and a better understanding of how the sensors operate and can be optimized and calibrated to fit the applications such as aerospace, wind and civil.
Exploitation Route We have demonstrated that novel sensors perform satisfactorily for detecting impact damage, enabling the identification of the impact location visually, and we have established direct correlations between visible and internal hidden damage detected by C-scan. These hybrid sensing layers serve as both load-bearing components and damage indicators and are entirely wireless, providing cost-effective and straightforward solutions for damage detection.

We believe that our findings will offer new insights into the development of SHM systems for impact damage detection in composite structures, and we anticipate that they will be of significant interest to both the academic and industrial communities.
Sectors Aerospace, Defence and Marine,Construction,Manufacturing, including Industrial Biotechology

 
Description We are developing industrial demonstrations of the hybrid sensor for monitoring composite panels in collaboration with the UK's organizations in R&D and manufacturing sector (BAE, Hexcel, and Luxfer, to name a few). The outcome is expected to have a huge potential market. But were are in the early stages, and expect to reach TRL4-5. In the long-term, the project will increase the awareness of the researchers and engineers to improve safe and easy-to-inspect engineering designs. As a result, inspectability, health and safety, and lifetime of existing engineering structures will be improved, and new lightweight and safer structures with ease of inspection will be designed. This will result in reduced maintenance costs and waste, and the reduction of carbon emissions by less fuel consumption and less material usage due to a lighter weight and efficient maintenance
Sector Aerospace, Defence and Marine,Construction,Manufacturing, including Industrial Biotechology