About Damage and Failure for Fiber-Reinforced Composites

Abaqus/Standard and Abaqus/Explicit offer general capabilities for predicting the onset of damage and for modeling progressive damage and failure in fiber-reinforced composites, which include unidirectional fiber-reinforced composite materials and bidirectional fabric-reinforced composite materials. These capabilities require you to specify:

This page discusses:

Undamaged Response

Unidirectional fiber-reinforced composite materials exhibit elastic-brittle behavior; damage in these materials is initiated without significant plastic deformation. Consequently, plasticity is often neglected when modeling behavior of these materials. You must specify material properties in a user-defined local coordinate system, with the local 1-direction aligned with the fiber direction, as shown in Figure 1. You can use any of the available methods to define orthotropic elastic behavior to define the undamaged response.

Unidirectional lamina.

For bidirectional fabric-reinforced composite materials, the shear response is dominated by the nonlinear behavior of the matrix, which includes both plasticity and stiffness degradation due to matrix microcracking. The fiber directions are assumed to be orthogonal. You must specify material properties in a user-defined local coordinate system, with the local 1-direction and 2-direction aligned with the fiber directions, as shown in Figure 2. The material response along the fiber directions is characterized with damaged elasticity. The model incorporates different initial (undamaged) stiffness in tension and compression and differentiates between tensile and compressive fiber failure modes. Therefore, you must use bilamina elasticity to define the undamaged response (see Defining Orthotropic Elasticity in Plane Stress with Different Moduli in Tension and Compression).

Bidirectional fabric.

Damage Initiation Criteria

Abaqus offers the following damage initiation criteria for unidirectional fiber-reinforced composites:

Abaqus offers the following damage initiation criterion for bidirectional fabric-reinforced composites:

These models include initiation criteria for various failure mechanisms commonly observed in fiber-reinforced composites, such as fiber fracture in tension, fiber buckling/kinking under compression, and matrix cracking/crushing under tension/compression. These criteria are discussed in Damage Initiation for Fiber-Reinforced Composites.

Once a particular damage initiation criterion is satisfied, the material stiffness is degraded according to the specified damage evolution law for that criterion. In the absence of a damage evolution law, the material stiffness is not degraded.

Damage Evolution

The damage evolution law describes the rate of degradation of the material stiffness once the corresponding initiation criterion is reached. At any given time during the analysis, the stress tensor in the material is given by:

σ = C d ε e l ,

where C d is the damaged elasticity matrix. Abaqus assumes that the degradation of the stiffness of the fiber and matrix components can be expressed in terms of three scalar damage variables that reflect the current states of fiber, matrix, and shear damages, respectively. The evolution of the elasticity matrix due to damage is discussed in more detail in Damage Evolution and Element Removal for Fiber-Reinforced Composites; that section also discusses:

The LaRC05 damage initiation model supports damage evolution only when used with enriched elements to model discontinuities (such as cracks) in an extended finite element method (XFEM) analysis. For more information, see Modeling Discontinuities as an Enriched Feature Using the Extended Finite Element Method.

Elements

The Hashin damage model and ply fabric damage model must be used with elements with a plane stress formulation, which include plane stress, shell, continuum shell, and membrane elements. The LaRC05 damage model is available with three-dimensional solid, plane stress, shell, solid shell, and membrane elements.

References

  1. Camanho P. P. and CGDavila, Mixed-Mode Decohesion Finite Elements for the Simulation of Delamination in Composite Materials,” NASA/TM-2002–211737, pp. 137, 2002.
  2. Hashin Z.Failure Criteria for Unidirectional Fiber Composites,” Journal of Applied Mechanics, vol. 47, pp. 329334, 1980.
  3. Hashin Z. and ARotem, A Fatigue Criterion for Fiber-Reinforced Materials,” Journal of Composite Materials, vol. 7, pp. 448464, 1973.
  4. Johnson A. F.Modelling Fabric-Reinforced Composites under Impact Loads,” Composites Part A: Applied Science and Manufacturing, vol. 32, no. 9, pp. 11971206, 2001.
  5. Lapczyk I. and JAHurtado, Progressive Damage Modeling in Fiber-Reinforced Materials,” Composites Part A: Applied Science and Manufacturing, vol. 38, no. 11, pp. 23332341, 2007.
  6. Matzenmiller A.JLubliner, and RLTaylor, A Constitutive Model for Anisotropic Damage in Fiber-Composites,” Mechanics of Materials, vol. 20, pp. 125152, 1995.
  7. Pinho S. T.RDarvizehPRobinsonCSchuecker, and PPCamanho, Material and Structural Response of Polymer-Matrix Fibre-Reinforced Composites,” Journal of Composite Materials, vol. 46, no. 19-20, pp. 23132341, 2012.
  8. Sokolinsky V. S.KCIndermuehle, and JAHurtado, Numerical Simulation of the Crushing Process of a Corrugated Composite Plate,” Composites Part A: Applied Science and Manufacturing, vol. 42, no. 9, pp. 11191126, 2011.