Fire impact on mechanically failed graphite/epoxy composites

Author:

Boushab Dounia1ORCID,Ouidadi Hasnaa1,Mote Aniket1,Priddy Matthew2,Kundu Santanu3,Pittman Charles U.4,Grunlan Jaime1,Wang Qingsheng5ORCID,Lacy Thomas1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. J. Mike Walker '66 Department of Mechanical Engineering Texas A&M University College Station Texas USA

2. Department of Mechanical Engineering Mississippi State University Starkville Mississippi USA

3. Dave C. Swalm School of Chemical Engineering Mississippi State University Starkville Mississippi USA

4. Department of Chemistry Mississippi State University Starkville Mississippi USA

5. Artie McFerrin Department of Chemical Engineering Texas A&M University College Station Texas USA

Abstract

AbstractAircraft crashes often initiate or accompany fire incidents. Post‐crash fires, in particular, can mask or destroy critical fractographic failure features necessary for accident reconstruction. As a first step in developing a coherent strategy for composite aircraft post‐crash forensic analysis, a series of vertical flame tests were performed on mechanically failed Cytec T40‐800/Cycom® 5215 graphite/epoxy unnotched compression, short beam strength, and in‐plane shear specimens. Visual inspection and scanning electron microscopy were used to examine the specimens fracture surfaces before and after fire testing. The fire‐induced damage included matrix decomposition, melt dripping, char, soot, delamination, and residual thickness increases. The composite thermal degradation was significantly influenced by the specimen stacking sequence, the fracture surface morphology, and the total available free surface area. In addition, microscopic inspection showed that char layers impeded heat conduction and oxygen transfer to the interior of the specimens resulting in less thermal damage to the underlying plies. Moreover, burned specimens with more available free surface area sustained more thermal degradation and fire combustion damage for a given fire exposure duration. Exposed fiber bundles from the fracture surfaces were susceptible to severe thinning and thermal oxidation, which destroyed critical fractographic failure features necessary for accident reconstruction.

Funder

Federal Aviation Administration

Mississippi State University

Texas A and M University

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Materials Chemistry,Polymers and Plastics,General Chemistry,Ceramics and Composites

Reference66 articles.

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