Evaluation of machining damage around drilled holes in a CFRP by fiber residual stresses measured using micro-Raman spectroscopy

Drilling used to assemble carbon fiber reinforced plastic (CFRP) parts is employed widely in industries. With drilling of CFRPs microscopic damage like residual stress or interfacial debonding between fiber and matrix is accompanied prior to macroscopic damage like delamination or chipping. Although...

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Autores principales: Takushi MIYAKE, Keita MUKAE, Michinari FUTAMURA
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Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: The Japan Society of Mechanical Engineers 2016
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:a0134c1628124ff29037006d619cf49e2021-11-26T06:58:32ZEvaluation of machining damage around drilled holes in a CFRP by fiber residual stresses measured using micro-Raman spectroscopy2187-974510.1299/mej.16-00301https://doaj.org/article/a0134c1628124ff29037006d619cf49e2016-10-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/mej/3/6/3_16-00301/_pdf/-char/enhttps://doaj.org/toc/2187-9745Drilling used to assemble carbon fiber reinforced plastic (CFRP) parts is employed widely in industries. With drilling of CFRPs microscopic damage like residual stress or interfacial debonding between fiber and matrix is accompanied prior to macroscopic damage like delamination or chipping. Although not only macroscopic damage but also microscopic damage is closely related with overall performance of composites, there is no effective method to evaluate microscopic damage. In the present study, quantitative evaluation of drilling-induced damage was attempted by measuring details of residual stresses in fibers for a unidirectional CFRP. Stress distributions along fiber located at the drilled-hole periphery were evaluated in μm spatial resolution by means of micro-Raman spectroscopy. At first, to clarify the dependence of drilling effect on fiber orientation and fiber location, residual stresses in fibers orientated at angles of 0°, 90° and 180° to cutting-edge were measured both on drill-entry and drill-exit side surfaces. As the result residual stresses in fibers caused by drilling were all compressive and showed considerable dependence on fiber orientation to cutting-edge of the drill. Residual stress in fibers at 90° arose firstly even in low feed speed. Difference was also observed between stress distributions of fibers on drill-entry side and those on drill-exit side. Next in order to decide the highest speed drilling without damage, interfacial stress distributions were monitored with increasing feed speed. Experiments of the same feed rate with different rotational speed were also conducted to examine the effect of rotational speed. Damage at the interface, i.e., interfacial debonding occurred between 30 mm/min to 150 mm/min feed. And higher rotational speed resulted in smaller residual stress even in the same feed rate a rotation. Such results show that evaluation using micro-Raman spectroscopy is well applicable to prove details of drilling-induced damage quantitatively.Takushi MIYAKEKeita MUKAEMichinari FUTAMURAThe Japan Society of Mechanical Engineersarticlecfrpdrilling-induced damagemicro-raman spectroscopyinterfacial debondingfiber residual stressfiber orientationMechanical engineering and machineryTJ1-1570ENMechanical Engineering Journal, Vol 3, Iss 6, Pp 16-00301-16-00301 (2016)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic cfrp
drilling-induced damage
micro-raman spectroscopy
interfacial debonding
fiber residual stress
fiber orientation
Mechanical engineering and machinery
TJ1-1570
spellingShingle cfrp
drilling-induced damage
micro-raman spectroscopy
interfacial debonding
fiber residual stress
fiber orientation
Mechanical engineering and machinery
TJ1-1570
Takushi MIYAKE
Keita MUKAE
Michinari FUTAMURA
Evaluation of machining damage around drilled holes in a CFRP by fiber residual stresses measured using micro-Raman spectroscopy
description Drilling used to assemble carbon fiber reinforced plastic (CFRP) parts is employed widely in industries. With drilling of CFRPs microscopic damage like residual stress or interfacial debonding between fiber and matrix is accompanied prior to macroscopic damage like delamination or chipping. Although not only macroscopic damage but also microscopic damage is closely related with overall performance of composites, there is no effective method to evaluate microscopic damage. In the present study, quantitative evaluation of drilling-induced damage was attempted by measuring details of residual stresses in fibers for a unidirectional CFRP. Stress distributions along fiber located at the drilled-hole periphery were evaluated in μm spatial resolution by means of micro-Raman spectroscopy. At first, to clarify the dependence of drilling effect on fiber orientation and fiber location, residual stresses in fibers orientated at angles of 0°, 90° and 180° to cutting-edge were measured both on drill-entry and drill-exit side surfaces. As the result residual stresses in fibers caused by drilling were all compressive and showed considerable dependence on fiber orientation to cutting-edge of the drill. Residual stress in fibers at 90° arose firstly even in low feed speed. Difference was also observed between stress distributions of fibers on drill-entry side and those on drill-exit side. Next in order to decide the highest speed drilling without damage, interfacial stress distributions were monitored with increasing feed speed. Experiments of the same feed rate with different rotational speed were also conducted to examine the effect of rotational speed. Damage at the interface, i.e., interfacial debonding occurred between 30 mm/min to 150 mm/min feed. And higher rotational speed resulted in smaller residual stress even in the same feed rate a rotation. Such results show that evaluation using micro-Raman spectroscopy is well applicable to prove details of drilling-induced damage quantitatively.
format article
author Takushi MIYAKE
Keita MUKAE
Michinari FUTAMURA
author_facet Takushi MIYAKE
Keita MUKAE
Michinari FUTAMURA
author_sort Takushi MIYAKE
title Evaluation of machining damage around drilled holes in a CFRP by fiber residual stresses measured using micro-Raman spectroscopy
title_short Evaluation of machining damage around drilled holes in a CFRP by fiber residual stresses measured using micro-Raman spectroscopy
title_full Evaluation of machining damage around drilled holes in a CFRP by fiber residual stresses measured using micro-Raman spectroscopy
title_fullStr Evaluation of machining damage around drilled holes in a CFRP by fiber residual stresses measured using micro-Raman spectroscopy
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of machining damage around drilled holes in a CFRP by fiber residual stresses measured using micro-Raman spectroscopy
title_sort evaluation of machining damage around drilled holes in a cfrp by fiber residual stresses measured using micro-raman spectroscopy
publisher The Japan Society of Mechanical Engineers
publishDate 2016
url https://doaj.org/article/a0134c1628124ff29037006d619cf49e
work_keys_str_mv AT takushimiyake evaluationofmachiningdamagearounddrilledholesinacfrpbyfiberresidualstressesmeasuredusingmicroramanspectroscopy
AT keitamukae evaluationofmachiningdamagearounddrilledholesinacfrpbyfiberresidualstressesmeasuredusingmicroramanspectroscopy
AT michinarifutamura evaluationofmachiningdamagearounddrilledholesinacfrpbyfiberresidualstressesmeasuredusingmicroramanspectroscopy
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