1Production Engineering and Design Department, Faculty of Engineering, Minia University, 61111 Minia, Egypt
2Mechanical Engineering Department, Collage of Engineering and Islamic Architecture, Umm Al-Qura University Makkah, KSA
3Mechanical Engineering Department, Faculty of Engineering, South Valley University, Qena, 83523
4Mechanical Engineering Department, Faculty of Engineering, Sohage University, Egypt
American Journal of Materials Engineering and Technology.
2018,
Vol. 6 No. 1, 1-7
DOI: 10.12691/materials-6-1-1
Copyright © 2018 Science and Education PublishingCite this paper: Mohamed K. Hassan, Mohammed Y. Abdellah, Ahmed F. Mohamed, Tareq S. ElAbiadi, S. Azam, W.W. Marzouk. Fracture Toughness of Copper/Glass-Reinforced Epoxy Laminate Composites.
American Journal of Materials Engineering and Technology. 2018; 6(1):1-7. doi: 10.12691/materials-6-1-1.
Correspondence to: Mohammed Y. Abdellah, Mechanical Engineering Department, Faculty of Engineering, South Valley University, Qena, 83523. Email:
mohammed_yahya42@yahoo.comAbstract
In last decades, hybrid composite materials play a competitive role in many industrial applications such as electrical and electronic industries. Copper/Glass-Reinforced Epoxy Laminate is a hybrid composite that is used in almost all electronic devices. Since these elements undergo different stress amplitudes under different working conditions, therefore the fracture toughness of such material is important to understand the failures occurred under different operating conditions. The present work aims to investigate the fracture behavior of these composites by experimentally measuring and predicting their fracture toughness and by numerically building the model. At the first stage, a center-notched tensile specimen is used to measure fracture toughness in mode I at room temperature; an average fracture toughness of

with SDV

is found. At the second stage, X-FEM is implemented to a simple numerical model to predict the fracture toughness of such a material and to measure stresses induced through the specimen during applied stress. The variation of both, predicted fracture toughness and
cohesive stress at the crack face with crack opening displacement, shows that
the finite element results are in good agreement with the experimental results.
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