Soft Matter Seminar: Predicting the reliability of fibrous composite materials

Soft Matter Seminar
Predicting the reliability of fibrous composite materials

Dr. Amy Engelbrecht-Wiggans
Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering
Rochester Institute of Technology

Fiber bundles and unidirectional continuous fiber composites are used in a variety of applications, including in composite overwrapped pressure vessels and bulletproof vests. The reliability of these fiber bundles are extremely crucial in these applications.

Abstract
:

Fiber bundles and unidirectional (UD) continuous fiber composites are used in a variety of applications, including in composite overwrapped pressure vessels (COPVs) and bulletproof vests. A carbon/epoxy COPV failure caused the September 2016 explosion of the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket at Cape Canaveral, leading to more than a billion dollars of damage, and in 2003 a police officer was fatally shot by a bullet that went through his vest. While the probability of these types of failures is low, each carries a large monetary and/or human cost. Furthermore, full sized specimens can be costly to test. For body armor the long term reliability is largely a function of material ageing, degrading the mechanical properties. The susceptibility of body armor to ageing is highly dependent on both the type of material and the conditions it is exposed to. In contrast, COPVs can effectively degrade with no further cause than a constant, low level pressure. The high stakes, low probability nature of these failures makes failure prediction a challenging and interesting research problem, requiring a unique blend of experiments with both statistical simulations and theoretical modeling. The broad goal of my work is to develop and verify a stochastic Monte-Carlo simulation to predict the stress strain behavior, at the lower probability tail, for bulk composite materials and understand how this behavior changes over time.

Speaker Bio:
Dr. Amy Engelbrecht-Wiggans is a new Assistant Professor at RIT, as of August 2021. She came to RIT from being a guest researcher at the National Institute of Standards and Technology, and received her Ph.D. from Cornell University in 2017. As a theoretical and applied mechanician, Dr. Engelbrecht-Wiggans’ research focuses on unidirectional continuous fiber composites, and particularly on low probability failure events related to long term reliability. To address these problems she uses a unique blend of experiments, theoretical modeling, and statistical simulation.

Intended Audience:
All are welcome. Those with interest in the topic.

About the Series:
RIT+ Soft Matter hosts a mini series every semester with invited speakers from different colleges at RIT.

To request an interpreter, please visit myaccess.rit.edu


Contact
Shima Parsa
Event Snapshot
When and Where
March 25, 2022
3:30 pm - 4:30 pm
Room/Location: 1305
Who

Open to the Public

Interpreter Requested?

No

Topics
faculty
research