Title: Example of Limit State Design Method
1Bolted joint failure modes
F. Matthews, in Handbook of Polymer Composites
for Engineers
2(No Transcript)
3Lay-up 1 45,0,-45,0,90,0,45,0,-45,0s Lay-up
2 45,-45,02,45,90,-45,03s Lay-up
3 45,-45,45,-45,90,05s Lay-up
4 45,-45,02,90,0,45,-45,02s Lay-up
5 45,-45,05,45,-45,90s
Effect of blocked laminate stacking sequence on
bearing strength
4Simplified procedures for designing composite
bolted joints
- from CC Chamis, J Reinf Plast Comp.,vol 9,
pp614-626
5Basic bolt geometry
F
y
x
61. Bearing (compression) failure
F
At failure, F d t sxc
72. Tension failure
F
At failure, F (w-d) t sxT
83. Wedge splitting(due to lateral pressure of
bolt)
F/2
F
At failure, F ½(2e - d) t syT
94. Shear out
F
At failure, F 2 e t txy
105. Combined tension and shear
F
At failure, F ½ t (w - d)sxT 2 e txy
11Example failure analysis
- High strength carbon/epoxy laminate.
- Layup 0,45,0,90s - 10 plies at 0.125 mm per
ply. - Fibre volume fraction 60
- Strength values
- long. tension (sxT) 546 MPa
- trans. tension (syT) 343 MPa
- long. compression (syT) 550 MPa
- in-plane shear (txy) 267 MPa
12Example failure analysis
- Bolt diameter (d) 6 mm
- Laminate thickness (t) 1.25 mm
- Joint width, or bolt spacing (w) 25 mm
- Edge distance (e) 25 mm
- Applied load (F) 5000 N
131. Bearing (compression)
- Compressive stress is
- sxc F / d t 5000 / (6 x 1.25) 667 MPa
- This is greater than the compressive strength of
the laminate, so bearing failure occurs. - The maximum load would be
- 550 x 6 x 1.25 4125 N
142. Tension
- Tensile stress is
- sxT F / (w - d) t 5000 / (19 x 1.25) 211
MPa - This is less than the tensile strength of the
laminate, by a factor of 2.6.
And so oneach failure mode is considered
separately, and a margin of safety calculated.
15Geometrical aspects
- It is straightforward to use a spreadsheet to
examine the dependence of overall strength and
failure mode on bolt geometry. - The following example takes the laminate
information given above, and calulates failure
loads for the 5 different modes as a function of
bolt diameter
16- shear failure load is independent of bolt
diameter- bearing failure occurs for d lt 12
mm- strongest joint has d between 12 and 13 mm,
where several failure modes are likely (for this
laminate)
17Multi-bolt joints
- from CC Chamis, J Reinf Plast Comp.,vol 9,
pp614-626
18(No Transcript)
19Example analysis of multi-bolt joint
- Connection required between composite panel and
metal plate. - Assume that all bolts share load equally.
- Bolts are designed for the composite - we
assume the metal plate is strong enough. - High strength carbon/epoxy laminate, as defined
previously. -
20Example analysis of multi-bolt joint
- Design tensile load (P) 400 N/mm
- Bolt diameter (d) 6 mm
- Bolt spacing (p) 6 bolt diameters 36 mm
- Edge distance (e) 4 bolt diameters 24 mm
21Load carried per bolt
- F bolt spacing x load per unit width
- 36 mm x 400 N/mm
- 14400 N
- 14.4 kN
-
22Number of bolts per row
- 1. Assuming bearing failure mode
- n F / d t sxc
- 14400 / (6 x 1.25 x 550)
- 3.5
- so 4 bolts are required to avoid bearing failure.
23Number of bolts per row
- 2. Assuming tension failure mode
- n F / (p - d) t sxT
- 14400 / (36 - 6) x 1.25 x 546)
- 0.7
- so only 1 bolt is required to avoid tensile
failure.
24Check other failure modes for edge and centre
bolts
- 3. Check first row centre bolt in shear-out
- Each bolt takes 14400 / 4 3600 N
- Shear stress 3600 / (2 e t) 60 MPa
- Compare with shear strength of laminate
- 60 lt 267 MPa, so OK.
25Check other failure modes for edge and centre
bolts
- 4. Check first row centre bolt in wedge
splitting - Transverse tensile stress
- 2 x 3600 / (2e - d) t 137 MPa
- Compare with transverse tensile strength of
laminate - 137 lt 343 MPa, so OK.
26Check other failure modes for edge and centre
bolts
- 5. Check corner bolt in tension/shear-out
- Force required to cause failure
- F ½ t (p - d)sxT 2 e txy
- 18248 N
- This is much greater than the actual load on this
bolt (3600 N), so OK.
27Other factors not included in preliminary design
- Bypass load
- Friction effects
- Cyclic loading and laminate degradation
- Thermal and moisture effects
- Biaxial loads
- Flat-wise compression