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Research Article

Experimental investigation of composite leaf spring reinforced with various fiber architecture

ORCID Icon &
Pages 129-145 | Received 27 Mar 2019, Accepted 26 Jul 2019, Published online: 13 Aug 2019
 

Abstract

Fiber-reinforced composites are the materials of choice in numerous advanced applications in the fields such as automotive, aerospace, and marine as compared to conventional engineering materials. In this context, the influence of reinforcement architecture on the static mechanical performance of composite leaf spring was investigated. Reinforcement in the form of E-Glass chopped fibers, uni-directional (UD), bi-directional (2D) woven, and 3D orthogonal woven preforms were used to prepare composite leaf spring with identical fiber volume fraction and composite processing conditions. Composite leaf springs were analyzed for tensile properties, load-deflection behavior, strain rate sensitivity, hysteresis behavior (Damping), and relaxation behavior. Performance of 3D woven-based composite leaf spring was significantly better than chopped, UD, and 2D counterparts in terms of energy absorption, strain rate sensitivity, hysteresis damping (energy dissipation), and relaxation behavior. Overall 3D composite leaf spring shows a high potential for leaf spring application.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

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