Abstract
This study presents experimental results of compression after impact (CAI) testing of aluminum honeycomb core sandwich structure with face sheets made of quasi-isotropic carbon/epoxy with two orthogonal directions of testing. In a previous study examining the CAI strength of honeycomb sandwich structure,1 it was found that that specimens had different CAI strengths depending on whether the core was oriented in the “L” or “W” direction. Since the face sheets were quasi-isotropic and the core should not (theoretically) affect the CAI strength for a given amount of damage (if the specimens fail by face sheet failure), this result was puzzling. In the study presented in this paper, further CAI tests, along with open hole compression testing were used in an attempt to ferret out the cause of the differing CAI strengths in the aforementioned study. The results showed that the lower CAI strength values were not due to the core orientation, but to the change in the quasi-isotropic face sheet ply sequence due to the 90° rotation.
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