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Improving shear strength of bolted joints in pultruded glass fiber reinforced polymer composites using carbon nanotubes

Research Abstract
The structural design of the bolted fiber reinforced polymer elements is typically governed by the capacity of the joint rather than the fiber reinforced polymer member, while the joint capacity is typically governed by the shear strength of the fiber reinforced polymer. Here, the possibility of improving the shear strength of bolted joints is investigated in the unidirectional glass fiber reinforced polymer plates by incorporating the multiwalled carbon nanotubes during glass fiber reinforced polymer fabrication. Glass fiber reinforced polymer double-shear bolted lap joints were fabricated using up to 1.0 wt% multiwalled carbon nanotubes–-epoxy nanocomposites. Finite element modeling using multicontinuum theory and element deletion techniques was performed to explain the joint behavior. The experimental investigations show that incorporating multiwalled carbon nanotubes improved the shear strength, ductility, and energy absorption significantly. Microstructural analysis proves that a chemical reaction between multiwalled carbon nanotubes and epoxy improves the shear strength of the matrix.
Research Authors
Moneeb Genedy, Rahulreddy Chennareddy, Eslam M Soliman, Usama F Kandil, Mahmoud M Reda Taha
Research Department
Research Journal
Journal of Reinforced Plastics and Composites
Research Pages
958 - 971
Research Publisher
SAGE Publications
Research Rank
1
Research Vol
36(13)
Research Website
http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/0731684417697827#articleCitationDownloadContainer
Research Year
2017