Modelling the damage to carbon fibre
composites due to a lightning strike
R. D. Chippendale, I. O. Golosnoy, P. L. Lewin, G.S. Murugan, J Lambert University of Southampton, UK19th January 2011
What are Carbon Fibre Composites• Multi layers of long carbon fibres which have been
impregnated into a polymer matrix
• In each layer the fibre direction is pointing along different orientations
[1] Composite material revolutionise aerospace engineering, Ingenia, 2008, http://www.ingenia.org.uk/ingenia/issues/issue36/edwards.pdf
Illustration of few layers of CFC [1]
Purpose of this Study• Growing interesting in using Carbon Fibre
Composite (CFC) as a high tech construction material. Examples: Wind turbines & Aircraft,
• This is due to CFC having:
– High strength
– Low weight
• Problem: Unlike traditional building materials (aluminium), CFC are highly anisotropic and are poor electrical and thermal conductors
• Aim: Optimise the CFC Layout to reduce the damage caused. This will be done by building a numerical model to investigate the physical processes which result from a lightning strike impacting CFC
Images show the typical damage from a lightning strike to a)
Carbon Fibre Composite [2] and b) Aluminium [3]
a)
b)
[2] Feraboli, P. and M. Miller, Damage resistance and tolerance of carbon/epoxy composite coupons subjected to simulated lightning strike. Composites Part A: Applied Science and Manufacturing, 2009. 40 (6-7): p. 954 - 967 [3] Uhlig, F., Contribution `a l’´etude des effets directs du foudroiement sur les mat´eriaux structuraux constituant un a´eronef. 1998, Universit´e de Paris.
Physical Processes – Overview
Main Physical Components• Initial Carbon fibre composite
material
CFC Cross section
Main Physical Components• Initial Carbon fibre composite material
• Two inputs into the system:
– Heat flux from the plasma channel
– Injection of current into the material
Plasma channel
Injected Current
Main Physical Components• Initial Carbon fibre composite material
• Two inputs into the system:
– Heat flux from the plasma channel
– Injection of current into the material
• Temperature profile in the material due to volumetric Joule heating and the plasma heat flux
Temperature profile
Main Physical Components
Change in material
• Initial Carbon fibre composite material
• Two inputs into the system:
– Heat flux from the plasma channel
– Injection of current into the material
• Temperature profile in the material due to volumetric Joule heating and the plasma heat flux
• Thermal-chemical degradation (polymer pyrolysis or phase change)
• Due to degradation need to consider the change in internal energy and change in materials
Main Physical Components
Gas transport
• Initial Carbon fibre composite material
• Two inputs into the system:
– Heat flux from the plasma channel
– Injection of current into the material
• Temperature profile in the material due to volumetric Joule heating and the plasma heat flux
• Thermal-chemical degradation (polymer pyrolysis or phase change)
• Due to degradation need to consider the change in internal energy and change in materials
• Gas transport inside material inc. conservation of energy and mass
• As hot gas escapes from the degradation site – change in internal energy
Numerical Model• Built a numerical model to replicate of physical process which occur in a
CFC due to a lightning strike
• The numerical model is based on an FEA approach
• Main assumptions of our model: – Can assume CFC material to be a homogenous anisotropic material
– Only considering the polymer pyrolysis degradation process (Previous work has shown this to be dominate degradation process) [4]
– Once gas is produced (due to pyrolysis) it immediately escapes. Therefore we do not consider the gas transport process
– All material properties are assumed constant with temperature
– Material properties are taken for a typical CFC after a literature review
[4] Chippendale, R. D. et. al. MODEL OF STRUCTURAL DAMAGE TO CARBON FIBRE COMPOSITES DUE TO THERMO-ELECTRIC EFFECTS OF LIGHTNING STRIKES, Proc. 30th International Conference on Lightning Protection
Model Verification
Numerical Model Verification – Experiment?
• Experimental verification was conducted by decoupling the thermal physical process from the electrical process by using a laser with a well controlled power input
• Damaged sample was then investigated using X-ray Tomography -From these scans the spatial extent of the damage can be determine
• Previous simulations have shown that the majority of volumetric Joule heating occurs in top few CFC layers. Therefore the joule heating from a lightning strike can be roughly approximated to surface heating
• Experiment was set up as shown below
• A 6W laser beam operating in 00 mode
• Laser beam had 2mm beam diameter
• Laser beam radiated the CFC for 180 s continuously
• A power density of the chosen laser beam has approximately to be comparable to that of a lightning strike – however the total power input is different
Experimental Set-up
2mm 7mm
Laser beam
CFC
Laser beam source
CFC
Top view of sampleSide view
Results
• Cross section X-ray tomography image shown: black is no CFC material, grey is CFC material
• Gas was visible given off during first 30 seconds and then stopped being visibly produced
• Very localised damage
– No damage visible on sides CFC
– Most of the damage is limited to the top two layers
• Carbon fibre evaporation is noticed
Experimental Results
4.2 mm
0.5 mm
Comparison
Top down
Cross section
Experimental Results
Numerical Model
X
Z
0 mm
0 mm0 mm
0 mm
10 mm
8 mm
10 mm
2 mm
7 mm
4 mm
0.5 mm
X
Y
6.37 mm
4.2 mm
0.5 mm
5 mm
2.25 mm
4.6 mm
7.4 mm
Volume fraction of polymer (φ)
0.6
0.3
0
• Similar shape in damage in damage
• Reasonable agreement between the spatial extent of the damage
Conclusion
Conclusion• Damage predicted by numerical model agrees fairly
accurately with the experimental results
• Possible reasons for inaccuracies:
– No exact material properties are known (thermal conductivity, pyrolysis energies)
– No gas transport included
• Next steps: Inclusion of gas transport
Thermo-Chemical degradation (phase change & pyrolysis)
Gas transport in material inc.
Conservation of energy and mass
Main Physical Components
Variation in bulk
material properties
Thermo-mechanical response – differential
thermal expansion, delamination of CFC
ply and internal cracks (not included here)
Temperature profile inside
material
Electrical conduction resulting in
volumetric joule heating
Lightning strike current Profile
Plasma surface heating around attachment area