Journal of Adhesion, Vol.93, No.1-2, 57-76, 2017
Testing different cohesive law shapes to predict damage growth in bonded joints loaded in pure tension
Adhesive bonding is a widely used joining method because of specific advantages compared to the traditional fastening methods. Cohesive zone modelling (CZM) is currently the most widely used technique for strength prediction. CZM supposes the characterization of the CZM laws in tension and shear. This work evaluated the tensile fracture toughness (G(IC)) and CZM laws of bonded joints with three adhesives by the double-cantilever beam (DCB) test. The experimental work consisted of the adhesives' tensile fracture characterization by the J-integral technique. As the main novelty of this work, the precise shape of the cohesive law of adhesives ranging from brittle to highly ductile was defined by the direct method, using a digital image correlation method to evaluate the tensile relative displacement (delta(n)) of the adhesive layer at the crack tip and adherends' rotation at the crack tip (theta(o)). Moreover, finite element (FE) simulations permitted assessing the accuracy of triangular, trapezoidal and linear-exponential CZM laws in predicting the experimental behaviour of the DCB bonded joints with markedly distinct behaviours. As output of this work, fracture data and information regarding the applicability of these CZM laws to each type of adhesive is provided, allowing the subsequent strength prediction of bonded joints.