Thursday, 14 May 2020Speaker: Prof. Thomas PardoenInstitute of Mechanics, Materials and Civil Engineering (IMMC), Université Catholique de Louvain Micromechanics of deformation and fracture in highly cross-linked thermosets – Impact on composite modelling |
© Julien Pohl |
Abstract
Advanced constitutive models for polymers have been essentially developed for thermoplastics with relatively limited applications/extensions to thermosets. Recent extensions of these constitutive models provide accurate predictions over a wide range of loading configurations, strain rates and temperature, encompassing below and above transition temperature regimes, although at the prize of a very large number of parameters, often larger than 30. Still, these models, mixing phenomenological and micromechanics ingredients, are often not rich enough to capture complex behaviors such as for instance severe non-linearity upon unloading or possible size effects, while missing also micromechanical connection to the failure process. This directly impacts the development of predictive multiscale models for polymer based composites. Based on extensive experimental test program on the highly cross-linked RTM6 epoxy, the viscoplastic response is found very similar to thermoplastics, with hardening-softening-re-hardening, large back stress upon unloading and existence of shear band patterns at very small scale. Furthermore, size effects are revealed when looking at nanoindentation data as well as indirectly when looking at the response of unidirectional composites. A molecular physics-based model of the deformation process occurring through the activation of nanometer scale shear transformation zones (STZ) has been worked out. The viscoplastic deformation is the result of the cooperative activation of STZ’s, sensitive to rate, temperature, stress state and stress level. This model involves only 7 parameters to identify, all with physical meaning. The model quantitatively captures the experimental trends, even some complicated responses during creep tests performed after plastic deformation at intermediate stress levels showing backward followed by forward creep. It also captures the size dependent strength resulting from large strain gradients putting a constraint on the development of the micro-shear banding process. In addition, a new micromechanics-based fracture model based on the attainment of a local maximum principal stress at the tip of microdefects is proposed and validated for a wide range of stress states. The implication of these results and micromechanical models on composite modelling is not straightforward. This is addressed through the analysis of in situ SEM compression tests on thick UD carbon fiber reinforced RTM6 matrix composite, involving the determination of digital image correlation strain fields. Difficulties remain to quantitatively capture the experimental response with the models identified on bulk resin data.
Biography
Thomas Pardoen is a professor at the Ecole Polytechnique de Louvain (UCLouvain) and president, since 2015, of the Institute of Mechanics, Materials and Civil Engineering of the UCLouvain in Belgium. Outside UCLouvain, he has also been president since 2014 of the Scientific Council of the Belgian Nuclear Energy Study Center SCK CEN. He completed engineering studies, a master's degree in philosophy and a doctoral thesis in applied sciences (1998) at UCLouvain. He was a post-doctoral fellow at Harvard University before returning to UCLouvain as an academic in 2000. His research interests cover the fields of nano-, micro- and macro-mechanics of materials, focusing on a multi-scale physics-based approach of deformation and failure mechanisms, also coupled with functional properties or irradiation effects. T. Pardoen is interested in different material systems, in particular hybrid, composite and architectural materials, metal alloys, engineering polymers, and thin films. He supervised 50 doctoral theses and 20 post-docs. He is a member of the editorial boards of J. Mech. Phys. Solids, Engng. Fract. Mech. and Int. J. Damage Mech. He has published more than 200 articles in international journals and received >8000 citations (Scopus). In 2011, he obtained the “Grand Prix Alcan” from the French Academy of Sciences and a “Chaire Francqui” from the University of Liège in 2015. He was appointed Euromech Fellow in 2015.
References
- X. P. Morelle, J. Chevalier, C. Bailly, T. Pardoen, F. Lani.
Mechanical characterization and modeling of the deformation and failure of the highly cross-linked RTM6 resin
Mech Time-Dep Mater 21, 419-454, 2017. - J. Chevalier, L. Brassart, F. Lani, C. Bailly, T. Pardoen, X. P. Morelle.
Unveiling the heterogeneity-controlled viscoplastic behavior of glassy polymers
J. Mech. Phys. Solids 121, 432-446, 2018. - J. Chevalier, X. P. Morelle, P. P. Camanho, F. Lani, T. Pardoen.
On a unique fracture micromechanism for highly cross-linked epoxy resins
J. Mech. Phys. Solids 122, 502-519, 2019. - J. Chevalier, P. P. Camanho, F. Lani, T. Pardoen.
Multi-scale characterization and modelling of the transverse compression response of unidirectional carbon fiber reinforced epoxy
Composite Structures 209, 160-176, 2019.
Other seminars given by the speaker
- Multimaterials Design for Electromagnetic Screening
Collège de France, 2013, in the colloquium “Filling Gaps in Materials Space: Methods and Applications” - Ultra-thin Self-supported Materials
Académie des sciences, 2020, in the talk "Plasticity, failure and nanomaterials : interactions between physics and mechanics" (in French)
Document compiled by Martin Avila Torrado and Emilien Baroux.