Experimental and analytical investigation was conducted to understand the hygrothermal properties of uniweave T300/QY9512 laminates. Tests were performed under hygrothermal and room temperature environment separately. Effect of stitching parameters upon strength performance of laminates was predicted using FEM model. Compressive strength of laminates, under different environmental conditions, was also predicted. Test results have shown that hygrothermal environment condition has a severe effect on the compressive strength of laminates and the reduction in compression strength for stitched laminates reached up to 50%. Stitching might improve the compressive strength of laminates depending upon the environmental conditions and lay-up sequence of stitched laminates.
An investigation based on experimental and analytical approaches was conducted to evaluate the behavior of the stitched laminates under hygrothermal conditions. Tensile strength of laminates under different environmental conditions was predicted using FEM model. Effects of stitching parameters upon strength performance of laminates were studied using FEM model and validity of results was checked by comparing with the experimental results. Test results have shown that hygrothermal environment condition has no significant effect on the tensile strength of unstitched laminates, but improved the strength of stitched laminates significantly. Stitching decreased the tensile strength of laminates under 20°C dry environment; however, it improved the tensile strength under 20°C wet environment. It was also found from analytical results that, the failure strength of stitched laminates is higher for smaller thread radius (R<0.25) and relatively greater (5~6mm) stitching distance (5~6mm).
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.