Experimental investigation of adhesive fillet size on barely visible impact damage in metallic honeycomb sandwich panels

Composites Part B: Engineering(2020)

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Abstract
Aluminum hexagonal honeycomb panels are commonly used in the aerospace industry to reduce weight due to their high stiffness to mass ratio. The panels are commonly involved in incidents where they are dented in the out-of-plane direction which causes plastic deformation in the face-sheet and buckling collapse of the thin repeating cell-walls in the core. This paper investigates the responses to barely-visible-impact-damage (BVID) in aluminum honeycomb sandwich panels in the out-of-plane direction with attention to the structural adhesive. The structural adhesive forms a fillet shape between the face-sheet and the aluminum core during the curing process and in some cases can encompass over 50% of the honeycomb core thickness. The adhesive fillets become stiff after curing and are able to brace the thin metallic cell-walls and prevent buckling in sections of the core enclosed in adhesive. It was shown that larger fillets cause the damage to occur deeper in the core. Force-displacement data collected from quasi-static experiments showed that as the amount of adhesive used in honeycomb panels was increased, the peak force required to produce a specified maximum dent depth increased as well. Absorbed energy positively correlated with an increasing quantity of adhesive; showing improvements of up to 50% when comparing panels with the largest amount of adhesive and no adhesive. This paper provides relationships between the quantity of adhesive used to fabricate metallic honeycomb sandwich panels and the damage resistance and energy absorption under BVID conditions.
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Key words
adhesive fillet size,visible impact damage
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