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by floxy
1100 days ago
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>The failure mode for a member in compression is buckling, which is resisted by stiffness Hmm, this is probably the right answer. When things start to buckle, you'd be putting part of the surface in tension, which would be resisted by the fiber. I would definitely be very interested to see the plots of strain gauges embedded throughout the thickness of the wall as it goes to depth (in all three axes, hoop, radial, and axial). My intuition completely fails here. Good thing I'm not making submersible vehicles. |
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Secondly, CF does substantially improve compressive strength over neat resin, which would fail in shear.
The fibers individually may not withstand compression, but embedding them in the epoxy resin prevents them from buckling and the composite material exhibits substantially improved performance over either base material.
The exception is tensile stress that causes delamination, for which there is no benefit over the neat resin.