Sangam: A Confluence of Knowledge Streams

Determining micro- and macro- geometry of fabric and fabric reinforced composites

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dc.creator Huang, Lejian
dc.date 2013-11-26T13:47:21Z
dc.date 2013-11-26T13:47:21Z
dc.date 2013-11-26
dc.date 2013
dc.date December
dc.date.accessioned 2023-04-10T10:07:05Z
dc.date.available 2023-04-10T10:07:05Z
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/2097/16929
dc.identifier.uri http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/CUHPOERS/285327
dc.description Doctor of Philosophy
dc.description Department of Mechanical and Nuclear Engineering
dc.description Youqi Wang
dc.description Textile composites are made from textile fabric and resin. Depending on the weaving pattern, composite reinforcements can be characterized into two groups: uniform fabric and near-net shape fabric. Uniform fabric can be treated as an assembly of its smallest repeating pattern also called a unit cell; the latter is a single component with complex structure. Due to advantages of cost savings and inherent toughness, near-net shape fabric has gained great success in composite industries, for application such as turbine blades. Mechanical properties of textile composites are mainly determined by the geometry of the composite reinforcements. The study of a composite needs a computational tool to link fabric micro- and macro-geometry with the textile weaving process and composite manufacturing process. A textile fabric consists of a number of yarns or tows, and each yarn is a bundle of fibers. In this research, a fiber-level approach known as the digital element approach (DEA) is adopted to model the micro- and macro-geometry of fabric and fabric reinforced composites. This approach determines fabric geometry based on textile weaving mechanics. A solver with a dynamic explicit algorithm is employed in the DEA. In modeling a uniform fabric, the topology of the fabric unit cell is first established based on the weaving pattern, followed by yarn discretization. An explicit algorithm with a periodic boundary condition is then employed during the simulation. After its detailed geometry is obtained, the unit cell is then assembled to yield a fabric micro-geometry. Fabric micro-geometry can be expressed at both fiber- and yarn-levels. In modeling a near-net shape fabric component, all theories used in simulating the uniform fabric are kept except the periodic boundary condition. Since simulating the entire component at the fiber-level requires a large amount of time and memory, parallel program is used during the simulation. In modeling a net-shape composite, a dynamic molding process is simulated. The near-net shape fabric is modeled using the DEA. Mold surfaces are modeled by standard meshes. Long vertical elements that only take compressive forces are proposed. Finally, micro- and macro-geometry of a fabric reinforced net-shape composite component is obtained.
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language en_US
dc.publisher Kansas State University
dc.subject Textile composites
dc.subject Fabric geometry
dc.subject Modeling
dc.subject Mechanical Engineering (0548)
dc.title Determining micro- and macro- geometry of fabric and fabric reinforced composites
dc.type Dissertation


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