posted on 2016-05-26, 00:00authored byJonny J. Blaker, David B. Anthony, Guang Tang, Siti-Ros Shamsuddin, Gerhard Kalinka, Malte Weinrich, Amin Abdolvand, Milo S.
P. Shaffer, Alexander Bismarck
An exciting challenge is to create
unduloid-reinforcing fibers
with tailored dimensions to produce synthetic composites with improved
toughness and increased ductility. Continuous carbon fibers, the state-of-the-art
reinforcement for structural composites, were modified via controlled
laser irradiation to result in expanded outwardly tapered regions,
as well as fibers with Q-tip (cotton-bud) end shapes. A pulsed laser
treatment was used to introduce damage at the single carbon fiber
level, creating expanded regions at predetermined points along the
lengths of continuous carbon fibers, while maintaining much of their
stiffness. The range of produced shapes was quantified and correlated
to single fiber tensile properties. Mapped Raman spectroscopy was
used to elucidate the local compositional and structural changes.
Irradiation conditions were adjusted to create a swollen weakened
region, such that fiber failure occurred in the laser treated region
producing two fiber ends with outwardly tapered ends. Loading the
tapered fibers allows for viscoelastic energy dissipation during fiber
pull-out by enhanced friction as the fibers plough through a matrix.
In these tapered fibers, diameters were locally increased up to 53%,
forming outward taper angles of up to 1.8°. The tensile strength
and strain to failure of the modified fibers were significantly reduced,
by 75% and 55%, respectively, ensuring localization of the break in
the expanded region; however, the fiber stiffness was only reduced
by 17%. Using harsher irradiation conditions, carbon fibers were completely
cut, resulting in cotton-bud fiber end shapes. Single fiber pull-out
tests performed using these fibers revealed a 6.75-fold increase in
work of pull-out compared to pristine carbon fibers. Controlled laser
irradiation is a route to modify the shape of continuous carbon fibers
along their lengths, as well as to cut them into controlled lengths
leaving tapered or cotton-bud shapes.