Influence of Reinforcement Architecture on Behavior of Flax/PLA Green Composites under Low-Velocity Impact

Samuel Charca, Liu Jiao-Wang, Carlos Santiuste

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

The main goal of this study is the comparison of different reinforcement architectures on the low-velocity impact behavior of green composites. The study includes the comparison of unidirectional, basket weave, and twill weave flax/PLA composites, they are subjected to unidirectional tensile tests, drop-weight impact tests, and after-impact compression tests. Results show that the unidirectional composite demonstrates superior tensile strength and initial modulus due to reduced fiber crimp, while basket weave exhibits the highest energy absorption capability and strain capacity attributed to its higher fiber–weight ratio and fiber crimp. Unidirectional composite also shows a larger impacted damage area compared to basket weave and twill weave, attributed to its internal architecture. Residual compressive strength across all composites decreased by 40% compared to the reference sample. However, the reduction in stiffness after impact was different, UD/PLA composite stiffness was reduced by 30% while the reduction in BW/PLA and T/PLA composites was about 20%.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2958
JournalMaterials
Volume17
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2024

Keywords

  • biocomposites
  • compression after impact
  • impact
  • low-velocity
  • weave pattern

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