4.7 Article

Temperature dependency of the toughening capability of electrospun PA66 nanofibers for carbon/epoxy laminates

Journal

COMPOSITES SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 216, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.compscitech.2021.109061

Keywords

Nano composites; Fracture toughness; Fractography; Scanning electron microscopy; Electro-spinning

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The study evaluated the toughening capability of electrospun PA66 nanofibers for carbon/epoxy composite laminates under mode II loading conditions at elevated temperatures. The results showed that the toughness of the nanomodified specimens decreased at higher temperatures due to decreased crack propagation through the nano-layer, a shift from cohesive to adhesive failure as the dominant damage mechanism, and severe plastic deformation of nanofibers at high temperatures.
The present study evaluates the toughening capability of electrospun PA66 nanofibers for carbon/epoxy composite laminates subjected to mode II loading conditions at elevated temperatures. The Dynamic Mechanical Analysis (DMA) test showed that the glass transition temperature of the produced nanofibers is in a range of -60-80 degrees C. Accordingly, End-Notched Flexure (ENF) carbon/epoxy specimens interleaved by a 50 mu m-layer of electrospun PA66 nanofibers were subjected to the quasi-static mode II loading at room temperature (-25 degrees C), 100 degrees C, 125 degrees C, and 160 degrees C. At room temperature, the mode II interlaminar fracture toughness (GIIC) of the nanomodified specimen was -4 times higher than the virgin specimen (non-modified) (3.12 kJ/m2 vs 0.81 kJ/m2). The results showed that GIIC of the virgin specimen was independent of temperature. However, in the case of the nano-modified specimen, although the GIIC did not change from room temperature to 100 degrees C (3.12 kJ/m2 vs 3.09 kJ/m2), by further increasing temperature to 125 degrees C and 160 degrees C, GIIC dropped by 34% and 43% respectively (2.05 kJ/m2 and 1.77 kJ/m2 respectively). 3D surface scans and Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) images of the fracture surface revealed three reasons for decreasing the toughening capability of the PA66 nanofibers at high temperatures: a) the crack crosses the nano-layer less at high temperatures, b) the dominant damage mechanism at low temperature is cohesive failure, the damage propagation within the nanolayer, while at higher temperatures adhesive failure, the debonding of the nanolayer from carbon fibers, plays a critical role in the fracture, and c) severe plastic deformation of nanofibers at high temperatures.

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