May 4, 2024
Mohammad Ali Mohtadi Bonab

Mohammad Ali Mohtadi Bonab

Academic rank: Associate professor
Address: Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Bonab, Velayat Highway, Bonab, Iran
Education: Ph.D in Mechanical Engineering
Phone: 04137745000
Faculty: Faculty of Engineering
Department: Mechanical Engineering

Research

Title
Thermal shock behavior of twill woven carbon fiber reinforced polymer composites
Type Article
Keywords
carbon fiber; epoxy matrix; thermal cycling; mechanical and thermal properties
Researchers Farzin Azimpour shishevan، Hamit Akbulut، Mohammad Ali Mohtadi Bonab

Abstract

In the current research, the effect of cyclic temperature variation on the mechanical and thermal properties of woven carbon-fiber-reinforced polymer (CFRP) composites was investigated. To this, carbon fiber textiles in twill 2/2 pattern were used as reinforced phase in epoxy, and CFRPs were fabricated by vacuum-assisted resin-infusion molding (VARIM) method. Thermal cycling process was carried out between 􀀀40 and +120 C for 20, 40, 60 and 80 cycles, in order to evaluate the effect of thermal cycling on mechanical and thermal properties of CFRP specimens. In this regard, tensile, bending and short beam shear (SBS) experiments were carried out, to obtain modulus of elasticity, tensile strength, flexural modulus, flexural strength and inter-laminar shear strength (ILSS) at room temperature (RT), and then thermal treated composites were compared. A dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) test was carried out to obtain thermal properties, and viscoelastic properties, such as storage modulus (E’), loss modulus (E”) and loss factors (tan ), were evaluated. It was observed that the characteristics of composites were affected by thermal cycling due to post-curing at a high temperature. This process worked to crosslink and improve the composite behavior or degrade it due to the different coefficients of thermal expansion (CTEs) of composite components. The response of composites to the thermal cycling process was determined by the interaction of these phenomena. Based on SEM observations, the delamination, fiber pull-out and bundle breakage were the dominant fracture modes in tensile-tested specimens.